Digital Alabama News

4980 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Journalism And The Threat Of Neo-Populism | Geopolitical Monitor
Journalism And The Threat Of Neo-Populism | Geopolitical Monitor
Journalism And The Threat Of Neo-Populism | Geopolitical Monitor https://digitalalabamanews.com/journalism-and-the-threat-of-neo-populism-geopolitical-monitor/ The first live debate ahead of presidential elections in Brazil saw the candidates indulging in extremely heated and offensive oratory, but at one point the populist President Jair Bolsonaro crossed all possible redlines while answering a question from one journalist. “I think you go to sleep thinking about me. You have a crush on me,” Bolsonaro told Vera Magalhães after she asked him about Brazil’s COVID-19 vaccination rate. “You are a disgrace to journalism in Brazil,” he continued acidly. Magalhães, a columnist working for Jornal O Globo, in contrast, reacted in a rather somber and professional tone, stating that Bolsonaro’s attitude was “absolutely out of control, unnecessary, and… harmful to himself.” She said she believed Bolsonaro “doesn’t like to be questioned by women.” Bolsonaro’s insulting comments to Magalhães come after he has faced ample criticism over his attitude toward women in general. The far-right populist disagrees of course, pointing to his government’s support for laws in favor of women’s rights and claiming that “a large part of women in Brazil love me” because he opposes legalizing drugs. The episode outlined above sounds quite familiar, echoing a similar incident on August 27 when, addressing a gathering in Jhelum, former prime minister Imran Khan also snobbishly lashed out at all journalists who dared criticize him or ask “difficult” questions. He referred to all those journalists as “lifafay and zameer farosh” (corrupt and conscious sellers) who were advising him to temporarily pause his protest campaign because of the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe caused by devastating floods in Pakistan. Even further back, it resembles the notorious incident of Donald Trump raging against CNN’s Jim Acosta, when Trump’s morning post-midterms presser devolved into an historic White House fracas when Acosta poked the presidential bear with his line of questioning about Trump’s caravan invasion rally rhetoric. “That’s enough! Put down the mic!” Trump shouted. “CNN should be ashamed of itself having you working for them. You are a rude, terrible person. You should not be working for CNN. The way you treat Sarah Huckabee is horrible. The way you treat other people is horrible!” Trump hissed at Acosta. In recent years, a long line of populist leaders has suddenly popped up on the global political radar – Donald Trump, Imran Khan, Boris Johnson, Narendra Modi, Emmanuel Macron, and Viktor Orban to name a few. All of them share a lot in common, particularly their theatrical demeanor and extreme disdain for the legacy media and professional journalists. This wave of radicalized populism has produced numerous such episodes where the populist politicians have directly and aggressively bullied and slighted journalists – and particularly female journalists – who happen to ask them any pricking questions or challenge their preferred narratives. This aggressive anti-journalist trend, arising out of their intrinsic fear of being exposed and challenged publicly, is a relatively new phenomenon that traces its roots to the introduction of social media as an overwhelmingly powerful propaganda tool in this new era of emerging technologies. The level to which journalism is being challenged and threatened is certainly unprecedented throughout the history of the profession. The content and authority of traditional news outlets are both being questioned, and their former monopoly on people’s attention is being increasingly diluted due to social media platforms. The emergence of populist politics is yet another momentous challenge, manifested in some cases by players openly hostile to journalists and even to the idea of press freedom in general. By exploiting the electoral mandate to undermine core institutions like the courts or news media, populism creates a political tribalism and cultism that inflames divisions, blunts civil discourse, and eschews political compromise. Populism mostly mobilizes people who have not been politically involved. At the same time, the relationship between populist communicators and the media has typically been thorny and strained.  Populist leaders mostly receive massive coverage in the mainstream press, and the news media outlets are typically portrayed by populist actors as part of a “corrupt” elite; yet ironically, on the other hand, these populist actors are also addicted to the “steroids of publicity” that these outlets can provide The populist impulse affects a big chunk of the public, which makes it quite difficult for the legacy media to provide balanced coverage amid mounting pressure from populist leaders. Yet some populist actors have systematically targeted the media as fake, lying, or unfair. That’s a challenge for journalists. There’s reason to think that journalist-bashing by politicians has very negative effects on the followers of these populist leaders, who have at times resorted to using violence against dissenting journalists. Populist politicians don’t trust the media. They believe that the press is prejudiced and not a true representation of society. What populist leaders like Donald Trump, Bolsonaro, and Imran Khan either don’t comprehend, or don’t care about, is that their own offensive actions against a journalist directly encourages their “fanatic devotees” to take it a step further. One day a political leader attacks the media, and the next day journalists are not merely the target of critiques, but death threats. A disproportionate number of those threats are aimed at female journalists, who experience sexualized abuse, gender-related threats, and gutter-talk behavior.  The general public appears to have little understanding of populism, and might see it as a fresh development or something that is entirely benign. But make no mistake: the rise of populist politics poses very serious challenges to journalists, legacy media, and democracy in general. The views expressed in this article belong to the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect those of Geopoliticalmonitor.com Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Journalism And The Threat Of Neo-Populism | Geopolitical Monitor
US Navy Launches $13bn Aircraft Carrier Trump Complained just Doesnt Look Right
US Navy Launches $13bn Aircraft Carrier Trump Complained just Doesnt Look Right
US Navy Launches $13bn Aircraft Carrier Trump Complained ‘just Doesn’t Look Right’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/us-navy-launches-13bn-aircraft-carrier-trump-complained-just-doesnt-look-right/ The largest aircraft carrier in the world has been sent out on its first deployment: The USS Gerald Ford left Norfolk, Virginia on Tuesday, heading out into the Atlantic. The ship’s deployment comes after delays that have lasted years and cost billions of dollars – $13bn in all. This specific aircraft carrier has a range of new technologies, such as “electromagnetic catapults that can launch planes and advanced weapons elevators that will move bombs and missiles up to the flight deck,” according to Insider. Washington Post reporters Robert Costa and Bob Woodward wrote in their new book Peril that former President Donald Trump often ranted about this very ship, arguing that the cost was too high and that the flight command centre’s placement was wrong. “It just doesn’t look right,” he said. In this April 14, 2017 file photo, as crew members stand on the deck, the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford heads to the Norfolk, Va., naval station (AP) In this file handout image courtesy of the US Navy taken on June 18, 2021 the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) completes the first scheduled explosive event of Full Ship Shock Trials while underway in the Atlantic Ocean (US NAVY/AFP via Getty Images) Democratic Virginia Representative Elaine Luria also slammed the carrier, calling it a “$13-billion nuclear-powered floating berthing barge”. The ship will take part in military exercises which will include around 9,000 people from nine countries, 20 vessels, and 60 aircraft, the Navy said in a press release. This handout photo provided by the US Navy shows the USS Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) departing Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia on October 4, 2022 (US NAVY/AFP via Getty Images) The Navy said the ship is the first new carrier designed in more than four decades. The building of the ship began in 2009 and it was commissioned by Mr Trump in 2017. Construction has already started on the next two carriers in the Ford category – the USS Kennedy and the USS Enterprise. Government officials and family members of former US President Gerald Ford salute a model of a new aircraft carrier named the USS Gerald R. Ford during a naming ceremony at the Pentagon in Washington, 16 January 2007 (AFP via Getty Images) The carrier has “nearly three times the amount of electrical power” of the previous Nimitz-class of carriers, the Navy said. The electromagnetic launch system, EMALS, uses electric power to launch planes from the carrier. Previously, a steam catapult system was used. The new system means that less stress will be put on the carrier and the time between launches has been cut down. Donald Trump (3rd R) salutes as he departs the USS Gerald R. Ford in Norfolk, Virginia, on July 22, 2017 (AFP via Getty Images) According to CNN, an official said the USS Gerald Ford is the sole forward-class carrier that has dual-band radar. The carrier will operate in the Atlantic Ocean and in the Mediterranean Sea on a deployment that will be shorter than the typical six-month timeframe. The Commander of Carrier Strike Group 12, Rear Admiral Gregory Huffman, said in a statement that “this deployment is an opportunity to push the ball further down the field and demonstrate the advantage that Ford and Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 8 bring to the future of naval aviation, to the region and to our allies and partners”. The other countries taking part in the exercise include Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
US Navy Launches $13bn Aircraft Carrier Trump Complained just Doesnt Look Right
Hunter Bidens Former Business Partner Says Top Ex-FBI Official Needs To Answer Questions
Hunter Bidens Former Business Partner Says Top Ex-FBI Official Needs To Answer Questions
Hunter Biden’s Former Business Partner Says Top Ex-FBI Official Needs To Answer Questions https://digitalalabamanews.com/hunter-bidens-former-business-partner-says-top-ex-fbi-official-needs-to-answer-questions/ Former Hunter Biden business partner Tony Bobulinski says questions need to be asked of a top former FBI official who was involved in leading the investigation into the president’s son and resigned from the agency while under scrutiny. Mr. Bobulinski, a Navy veteran and the former head of SinoHawk Holdings,  described as a partnership between the CEFC Chinese energy conglomerate and James and Hunter Biden, appeared on Fox News Channel’s Tucker Carlson Tonight on Tuesday. He described during the interview how he handed over allegedly incriminatory information about the first son’s business deals that involved the president’s brother, James Biden, Chinese and other foreign interests, and reportedly President Biden himself.    A top official in the Washington field office whom he said led the investigation never bothered to follow up with him after Mr. Bobulinski met with FBI investigators, and the official resigned from the agency recently. After The Washington Times first reported in late August that assistant special agent in charge Timothy Thibault, who dodged interviewing Mr. Bobulinski about Hunter Biden, had resigned from the bureau after accusations by Republicans of anti-Trump bias, a flood of FBI whistleblowers came forth to Congress, with some describing political bias at the FBI. “It sounds like they’re coming out of the woodwork, and I think it will continue to accelerate and, apparently, a variety of these whistleblowers claim that Tim Thibault was suppressing facts,” Mr. Bobulinski said.  “I’m in Europe traveling, and I called my lawyers and I ask, ‘Why haven’t I been called in front of a grand jury? This makes no sense to me.’ They said they were going to follow up within a week and do follow-up interviews.” Mr. Bobulinski says Mr. Thibault never met with him face-to-face despite telling his lawyers that he would follow up with him, after Mr. Bobulinski spent five hours talking to six federal agents in Washington D.C. about his business dealings just days before the 2020 presidential election. “They were supposed to be working a follow-up interview, and Tim Thibault, in his last discussion with my legal counsel was like ‘Listen, we know Tony’s cooperating. We appreciate all the information he’s provided. We will follow up with you. We’re definitely going to have them come in for a follow up interview or spend some more time on this.’ And I haven’t heard from him since.” “I was trying to respect the Department of Justice, but then when you hear the person that you’re told was assigned to run point on 1000s of documents, and text messages and calendars and travel and all that just walked out of the FBI headquarters in DC, you gotta start asking questions.” He said during the interview that he decrypted subtle word choices by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg from his interview with UFC commentator and podcaster Joe Rogan.  He also explained how it reportedly showed the FBI must have known how harmful his information on the Biden family was to Mr. Biden when he was running for the White House. Mr. Zuckerberg told Mr. Rogan earlier in the year that FBI officials cautioned Facebook executives about “a lot of Russian propaganda in the 2016 election” and to be on notice “there’s about to be some kind of dump — that’s similar to that, so just be vigilant.” “He used the word ‘dump,’ right? He said the FBI beat us [to] that a dump might be coming. They didn’t say there might be a story. The FBI was well aware there was a laptop … well aware there were hundreds of thousands of emails and text messages and stuff like that,” Mr. Bobulinski said. “The New York Post published a couple of emails trying to make the American public aware of it. But Mark Zuckerberg just casually said, oh, yeah, the FBI came to us and warned us of a dump,” he said, noting the company “throttled” the story’s reach across the platform. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Hunter Bidens Former Business Partner Says Top Ex-FBI Official Needs To Answer Questions
Cross Country 10/6/22
Cross Country 10/6/22
Cross Country 10/6/22 https://digitalalabamanews.com/cross-country-10-6-22/ By Randy Lefko Sports Editor Myers eighth in Georgia XC Fleming Island High junior cross country runner Graham Myers added to his top 10 finishes against top competition with an eighth place finish at the Wingfoot XC Classic in Cartersville, Ga., on September 24. With many of the top Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama teams in attendance, Myers registered a 15 minute, 27.10 second finish for eighth against the winning time of 15:06.20 set by Holy Innocents Episcopal School senior Joe Sapone. Holy Innocents boys team was second in Georgia last year. Sapone was top state finisher in sixth place last year. Second place went to Maxwell Hardin of Auburn High in Alabama (6th in Alabama 7A last year) in 15:07.10 with Tommy Latham of Marist High, Brookhaven, GA, third at 15:14.10. Latham, only a sophomore, ran a 15:10.8 last week in Huntsville, AL. In the packed field, the top 23 runners finished in under 16 minutes with Myers the lone Florida athlete. Fleming Island finished seventh in the field of 24 teams with 274 points while Brentwood High (TN) won with 70 ahead of St. Anthony’s 129 as runnerup. Brentwood, the Tennessee Large Class two-time state champion last year and third-ranked in the southeast in 2022 (Creekside High second and Belen Jesuit Prep, both in Florida, are number one), had three runners in the top 15. Brentwood’s Brody Chapman, fifth in Tennesse last year, took fifth at Wingfoot in 15:20.50. For the Golden Eagles, John Keester IV finished at 32nd with a 16:08.30 split for one of his fastest times of 2022 with Danny Sakowski 7u8th as the Golden Eagles third finisher in 16:47.10, also a fast time. Fleming Island had a third finisher under 17 minutes; Jacob Campbell, a sophomore, in 16:54.70 for 90th. In the girls championship race, Fleming Island finished 13th of 24 teams led by Katelyn Thompson’s 19:54.40 for 52nd, Reese Scott at 55th in 19:55.50 and Allie Knotts in 58th in 19:58.00. In the supercharged top finishers of the field, Marist High’s Ruby Little scorched for the win in 18:08.50 with Carmel Yonas of South Forsyth second in 18:13.30. The top 15 were all under 19 minutes. Auburn High won the girls team title with 106 points just ahead of Brentwood at 115 and Marist at 188. Fleming Island finished with 356 team points. In a freshman only race, Fleming Island’s Brooke Reynolds won the overall title in 20:55.00 with teammate Chloe Bourre 11th in 21:35.70. OHS Barrera 11th at Caples XC Oakleaf High senior Sierra Barrera finished 11th at the Katie Caples XC Invitational at Bishop Kenny High on September 24 to lead area runners at that event. Barrera, in the elite girls race, finished in a pack of four runners that charged the finish line just under the 19:20 mark with the overall win going to Ponte Vedra junior Lindy White in 18:29.00 in a decisive front running win over Ava Wyant of Master’s Academy in Orlando who was second in 18:37.34. In the varsity boys race held separately, Orange Park finished fifth and St. Johns Country Day School was seventh behind winner Bartram Trail who missed a cross country shutout (15Pts) with 18 points. Bartram Trail had all five scoring runners in the top 10 finishers between 17:27.76 and 18 minutes. St. Johns Richard Nichols was top area finisher in ninth at 18:32.83 with Orange Park’s Ethan Cobb at 17th in 19:21.76. In the girls varsity race, St. Johns sophmore Rebecca Stratton was third in 21:45.74 with Clay High’s Kaygen Williamson sixth in 22:09. St. Johns was second to Bartram Trail, 33-64, in team points. For Middle School boys, Jack Strombeck of Oakleaf Junior High, was seventh in 10:44l82 for 3Km. In varsity boys, 5Km, Oakleaf senior Duane Lee was top finisher in seventh at 17:55.21. KHHS Griffin second at Suwannee XC Keystone Heights High junior Tyler Griffin finished second in 17 minutes, 27.20 seconds at the Suwannee County XC Invitational held September 24 at Heritage Park and Gardens in Live Oak, FL. Keystone Heights boys finished sixth in the field of eight with Suwannee landing four runners in the top 10 for the team title with 37 points; Columbia second with 51. In the girls race, Olivia Griffin, an eighth grader at Keystone Heights, was top finisher in eighth place in 22:44.80. PK Yonge had four finishers in the top 10 led by twin freshman sisters Paulina and Ellie Cervantes coming in 1-2 at 20:54.90 and 21:19.30. Joel Nesi tabbed as PBC Runner of the Week ST. AUGUSTINE – Flagler College’s Joel Nesi was selected as the Peach Belt Conference Runner of the Week for the first time in his career, released by conference officials on Tuesday. Nesi is a graduate from Ridgeview High School in Clay County. Nesi, a two-time all-conference runner, opened his season at the Eastern Florida State College Fall Classic on Saturday, Sept. 10. Nesi crossed the finish line of the 8-K course at 26:00.5 to secure fifth place on the 78-man field. The junior ran an average 5:13.9 mile and holds the fastest 8k time in the Peach Belt this season so far by almost a full minute. Nesi helped lead the Saints to a third-place finish among seven teams. KHHS Guy 26:31 for Mocs SAINT LEO, Fla. – The Florida Southern men’s cross country team used a strong team performance to take second place at the Abbey Invitational hosted by Saint Leo University Saturday morning. The top-five Moccasin finishers all placed inside the top-20 to outpace the host Lions for second. The only program to finish ahead of the Mocs was Embry-Riddle whom FSC faced in the opening meet of the season as well. Former Keystone Heights High School cross country and track standout Alex Guy, a Florida Southern senior, finished just over a second behind in eighth place in 26:22.71. Freshman Anthony Matthew led a group of four Mocs who finished seventh through 11th to score valuable points for the team. Matthew took seventh overall after completing the 8K course in 26:21.31. Freshman Christian Giller finished two spots back in 10th at 26:31.48 while junior Bryson Yamnitz just missed out on a top-10 showing with an 11th place finish after stopping the clock at 26:33.30. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Cross Country 10/6/22
New Orleans Boyfriend Brings New Material To Alabama Music Box
New Orleans Boyfriend Brings New Material To Alabama Music Box
New Orleans’ Boyfriend Brings New Material To Alabama Music Box https://digitalalabamanews.com/new-orleans-boyfriend-brings-new-material-to-alabama-music-box/ Stephen Centanni With the exception of two years spent at Auburn University, Steve Centanni has spent his life in Mobile County while focusing on his two passions: music and the written word. As soon as he was issued his driver’s license, Centanni began to explore the local music scene in the early ‘90s. He filled his weekend with visits classic local venues such as the Four Strong Winds Coffee House, Vincent Van Go-Go’s and Culture Shock, all of which welcomed those who had yet to reach 18. After high school, Centanni traded Mobile for Auburn to complete his B.A. in English with an emphasis on general writing. While at Auburn, he had the honor of studying under the Pulitzer-winning poet Natasha Trethewey, who served as the nation’s Poet Laureate in 2012 and 2014. After receiving his diploma, Centanni quickly moved back to Mobile and completed the University of South Alabama’s graduate program with a M.Ed. Eventually, he was tapped by the nationally distributed Volume Entertainment Magazine to serve as the magazine’s managing editor/senior writer. His time with Volume allowed him to exercise his love for both music and writing. As Volume began to fade, Lagniappe recruited Centanni as their Music Writer and later their Music Editor, where he has remained for a little over a decade. As far as his involvement in the local music scene, Centanni organized Cess Fest at the Langan Park, which was a mini-festival focused on original local music in a time when original local music was veritably taboo in Downtown Mobile. For a short time, he brought original music to Downtown Mobile as the in-house promoter for the now deceased venue Cell Block. He managed local underground powerhouse Fry Cook, until the members parted ways. Centanni has lent his bass to bands such as Keychain Pistol and The F’n A-Holes, and he toured nationally as a member of Abstract Artimus & the Torture Children. Currently, he provides vocals for the garage blues rock outfit Johnny No. Ultimately, Centanni’s experience in the local music scene as both a participant and an observer has allowed him to witness the ever-changing persona of Mobile’s enigmatic music scene, which continues to leave him with more questions than answers. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
New Orleans Boyfriend Brings New Material To Alabama Music Box
Mar-A-Lago Documents Inadvertently Published Online And Undercut Trumps Privilege Claims
Mar-A-Lago Documents Inadvertently Published Online And Undercut Trumps Privilege Claims
Mar-A-Lago Documents Inadvertently Published Online — And Undercut Trump’s Privilege Claims https://digitalalabamanews.com/mar-a-lago-documents-inadvertently-published-online-and-undercut-trumps-privilege-claims/ The Justice Department’s detailed lists of seized materials from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence were inadvertently published online on Tuesday. A judge ordered that the logs stay under seal, but they appeared to be inadvertently posted to the public court docket, according to Bloomberg, which first reported on the documents. The filing, which is no longer publicly visible, included a combination of government, business and personal documents. Some of these records included analysis of who should get a pardon, retainer agreements for lawyers and accountants as well as legal bills. A “Privilege Review Team” followed specific “search procedures and filter protocols while executing the warrant” to search Mar-a-Lago and divided potentially privileged material into two categories, according to the filing. The filter team found 520 pages that needed a closer look but later determined few of those documents fell under any legal privileges. The first set of 137 documents included government records, public documents and communications with outside parties. A 39-page document, in which a “majority of pages are titled ‘The President’s Calls’ and include the Presidential Seal” contain handwritten names, numbers and notes that appear to be messages and notes.   The other list included documents that the team identified should be returned to Trump, including a “medical letter” from a doctor, legal complaints and information about legal fees to lawyers.  The former president has repeatedly expressed his disapproval of the search of his Florida home, describing it as an “unwarranted, unjust, and illegal Raid and Break-In.” On Tuesday, Trump’s lawyers asked the Supreme Court to intervene in the fight over records and ensure that the more than 100 documents marked as classified are part of the special master’s review. “The Eleventh Circuit lacked jurisdiction to review the Special Master Order, which authorized the review of all materials seized from President Trump’s residence, including documents bearing classification markings,” the application said.  Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. This would allow Trump to pursue claims that the documents with restrictive classifications like “Top Secret” should not be reviewed by Justice Department investigators since they are subject to executive privilege. Trump has also dubiously claimed that he declassified them before leaving office.  The Justice Department’s Aug. 30 report identified how the privilege review team divided documents covered by attorney-client privilege into a different batch that would remain separate from Justice Department attorneys and FBI agents managing the criminal probe.  More than 300 pages were flagged to be returned to the former president, including IRS forms and other tax-related documents, a letter from Trump campaign legal advisor, an insurance benefits letter, a confidential settlement agreement between PGA and Trump Golf, a civil complaint and a nondisclosure agreement and contract agreement regarding Trump’s Save America political action committee. Federal Judge Raymond Dearie will be conducting the review of the 520 pages of documents since the Justice Department was unable to convince a judge in Florida that their filter process didn’t need an outside special master to review the documents. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Mar-A-Lago Documents Inadvertently Published Online And Undercut Trumps Privilege Claims
Opinion | Haberman Book: Tucker Carlson Pressed Trump White House To Pardon Roger Stone
Opinion | Haberman Book: Tucker Carlson Pressed Trump White House To Pardon Roger Stone
Opinion | Haberman Book: Tucker Carlson Pressed Trump White House To Pardon Roger Stone https://digitalalabamanews.com/opinion-haberman-book-tucker-carlson-pressed-trump-white-house-to-pardon-roger-stone/ We knew Fox News host Tucker Carlson was an effective propagandist, based on his years attacking the attackers of Donald Trump. Now we’re learning what a force he can be as a lobbyist. In early 2020, Carlson met with Trump adviser Jared Kushner to secure clemency for his friend Roger Stone, the renowned political dirty trickster whose résumé as an operative goes back to Richard M. Nixon. The revelation comes from the new book by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.” The episode highlights one of the baked-in perils of the media industry: People who work in it get awfully close to power, and avoiding the temptations of that proximity requires integrity. As well as bosses who actually care about journalistic principles, a dynamic not in evidence at Fox News. Most of the Carlson-Stone story is a matter of very public record. As the Erik Wemple Blog explained at length in 2020, the two have been close for years. The mutual backscratching surfaces in printed material and video clips. “Like many in the upper reaches of media, business and government, this executive stood in fear and trembling before the legend of Roger Stone,” wrote Carlson in the introduction for a book authored by Stone in 2018. “And for good reason: Roger Stone is a troublemaker — indeed, not just a troublemaker, but perhaps the premier troublemaker of our time, the Michael Jordan of electoral mischief. This is either terrifying or delightful, depending on your uptightness level. I love it. Television executives don’t. That’s the difference.” Stone has been an occasional guest on “Tucker Carlson Tonight.” Follow Erik Wemple’s opinionsFollow Add And “Tucker Carlson Tonight” has been there for Stone. When the FBI in January 2019 raided Stone’s Florida home, Carlson denounced the tactic and criticized CNN for obtaining video of the early-morning action. The network, he contended, was in cahoots with officials from Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, which had been probing Stone’s activities. “CNN acted as the public relations arm of the Mueller investigation, as they have before,” said the host. (In fact, CNN journalists’ presence that morning was because of a hunch informed by their reporting.) Stone was subsequently indicted — on counts that included witness tampering and making false statements — found guilty on all counts and sentenced to more than three years in prison. The whole affair short-circuited Carlson, who just couldn’t stand by and allow the justice system to do its thing. When it emerged that the Mueller report hadn’t established a Trump-Russia conspiracy, Carlson howled about Stone’s situation: “Where are the pardons here?” asked Carlson in March 2019. “I mean, is it time for the executive branch to send a really clear message we’re going to stop the destruction of innocent people by completely out-of-control bureaucrats?” Following Stone’s conviction, Carlson revealed some inside reporting on a possible pardon, citing Kushner as one gatekeeper. “We’re hearing that certain people around the president — possibly his son-in-law, maybe not — are telling him no, you can’t pardon Roger Stone, even though the president has come out and said publicly, I think that this was a travesty.” That little clue perhaps explains why, in Haberman’s book, Carlson seeks an audience with Kushner. In the meeting, Carlson told Kushner that if Trump didn’t act, he’d “press the issue publicly,” according to “Confidence Man.” As noted above, Carlson had already been doing just that, but in mid-February 2020, in the days leading up to Stone’s sentencing, Carlson did multiple segments on the topic. “You know what the average rapist does in this country? We checked today — four years. You know what the average armed robber gets? Three years. The average thug who violently assaults somebody? Less than a year and a half,” riffed Carlson on Feb. 11. “But the left, CNN as well, demanding that Roger Stone die in prison. This man needs a pardon.” The next night, he kept at it. “If the Russia collusion story was a hoax, and of course it most certainly was a hoax, then why is Roger Stone going to prison for his role in it?” he asked. “If Roger Stone serves even a single day behind bars, the Russia lie will be validated as true.” On it went: “Prosecutors want Roger Stone to serve nine years not because he hurt someone or hurt this country. He didn’t. But because they hate him,” Carlson said on Feb. 13. The transcripts, in other words, reflect that Carlson made good on the consequences that he’d dangled before Kushner — if Trump didn’t act, he’d make a public fuss. Journalists don’t, or should not, veer into this sort of personal advocacy; their role is to determine what is happening and to report the findings, the better to inform viewers. Yet viewers weren’t the priority for Carlson. Stone was. We asked both Fox News and Carlson himself about the report in Haberman’s book. Neither responded to emails. You know who’s on record as despising the sort of strong-arm tactics that Carlson deployed against the White House in this instance? Tucker Carlson. In December 2018, he accused former Playboy model Karen McDougal of “extortion” in her dealings with Trump in the previous presidential election. The accusation was false, and McDougal filed a defamation suit against Carlson. The complaint was dismissed because a federal judge ruled that “Tucker Carlson Tonight” was not to be taken seriously. Someone, however, apparently took him seriously indeed. In December 2020, the White House announced Stone’s pardon. In an appearance on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” shortly after the news broke, Stone said, “Well, Tucker, thanks for your outstanding analysis and reporting on this issue.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Opinion | Haberman Book: Tucker Carlson Pressed Trump White House To Pardon Roger Stone
Environment And Democracy In The Eye Of The Storm
Environment And Democracy In The Eye Of The Storm
Environment And Democracy In The Eye Of The Storm https://digitalalabamanews.com/environment-and-democracy-in-the-eye-of-the-storm/ Hurricane season and election season have converged in the United States. The prospect of catastrophic and irreversible climate change and the possible decline of democracy in the world are very real scenarios. The fate of these essential pillars of our society depends largely on what we all do in the coming months and weeks. The climate catastrophe engulfing the planet requires a truly global solution, which the majority of the world’s population is eager to achieve. But the will of the people means less and less these days in the face of the growing number of governments that are spilling out under the control of autocratic leaders. We are talking about nationalists, racists, xenophobes and dogmatists, who are gaining power in country after country. Italy is a prime example of this. Just this week, a neo-fascist political party – previously in the minority – won an absolute majority in national elections. Giorgia Meloni will thus become the first far-right leader to head the Italian government since Benito Mussolini was ousted in 1943. Speaking to Democracy Now!, Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a professor of history and Italian studies at New York University, said: “[Meloni] really sees her party as the bearer of the fascist heritage today. So much so that Ignazio La Russa, a veteran party leader, said a few days ago: ‘We are all heirs of the ‘duce’ [Mussolini]’”. Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party is part of an increasingly powerful far-right movement in Europe that includes Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party, Spain’s Vox party, France’s National Rally party led by Marine Le Pen, and Sweden’s Democrats party, which grew out of that country’s neo-Nazi movement and is now poised to lead a new right-wing coalition government there. Similarly, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is the model ‘strongman’ of the European right, a leader who restricts freedom of the press and speech, openly advocates racist and anti-immigration policies, criticises the European Union and opposes the integration of European countries. Orbán, Meloni and other leaders of the European right have the backing of the US Republican Party and the man who hopes to become its “strongman”, Donald Trump. In fact, the Republican Party has purged its ranks of Trump critics and is rapidly organising in several states across the country to disregard the election results if they are not to their liking. Instead of storming the Capitol, as thousands of Trump supporters did on 6 January 2021, the party now has a plan to take power quietly. For this, it is counting on restricting voter turnout and other strategies with which to declare victory regardless of the outcome of the elections to be held in November 2024. Corrupt state legislatures and electoral maps rigged in favour of Republicans, as well as Trump-aligned governors and secretaries of state, have already set this plan in motion in order to consolidate more power in the midterm elections, which are just over a month away. Trump has repeatedly claimed that climate change is a hoax. His European allies are not so blatant about it, but they are mostly in favour of expanding fossil fuel consumption and relying increasingly on nuclear power. Its unity also opposes UN-led negotiations to combat the climate change crisis. This year’s “Conference of the Parties” to the Kyoto Protocol – dubbed COP27 – will be held in November in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. A broad coalition of activists is calling on the military dictatorship led by Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to allow civic and environmental organisations to participate and to release the large number of political prisoners currently held in Egypt. The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change often relies on dictatorships. Previous conference hosts have included Qatar and Morocco, countries where genuine protest is effectively banned. The 2023 Conference of the Parties will be held in the oil-rich city of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. Let these UN climate change summits not be organised by authoritarian regimes. Last April, reflecting on climate change activism in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, environmentalist Bill McKibben wrote: “Part of the work of climate justice activists is to promote functioning democratic states, where people’s demands for a viable future have priority over vested interests, dogmas and personal fiefdoms”. In countries where protest demonstrations are allowed to some extent, such as the United States, the stakes are high and time is short. Peter Kalmus, a NASA climate change scientist, understands this all too well. In April, Kalmus was arrested while demonstrating against the continued investments of the banking firm JP Morgan Chase in fossil fuel projects. During an interview with Democracy Now! Kalmus said: “I keep shouting at the top of my lungs. I risk getting arrested. I’ve been forced to become a climate change activist. […] I am terrified by the inaction of world leaders who keep circling around the real issue, which is that we have to rapidly reduce the fossil fuel industry… This is bittersweet for me. We are finding exoplanets. We’re doing these incredible missions, like asteroid rerouting, but all that technology and all that knowledge is not helping to stop what is clearly the biggest threat facing humanity: global warming. Hurricanes and drought have forced millions of people from their homes. This climate change-driven migration increases anti-immigrant sentiment in Europe and the US and further empowers racist xenophobes like Trump and Meloni. The environment and democracy are under enormous threat. Our ability to weather this storm depends on the concerted action of a global majority that is serious about tackling increasingly difficult obstacles. The original article can be found here Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Environment And Democracy In The Eye Of The Storm
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia https://digitalalabamanews.com/u-s-believes-ukrainians-were-behind-an-assassination-in-russia/ American officials said they were not aware of the plan ahead of time for the attack that killed Daria Dugina and that they had admonished Ukraine over it. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Daria Dugina’s memorial service in Moscow in August. U.S. intelligence agencies believe that parts of the Ukrainian government authorized the attack that killed her.Credit…Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Oct. 5, 2022Updated 1:35 p.m. ET WASHINGTON — United States intelligence agencies believe parts of the Ukrainian government authorized the car bomb attack near Moscow in August that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of a prominent Russian nationalist, an element of a covert campaign that U.S. officials fear could widen the conflict. The United States took no part in the attack, either by providing intelligence or other assistance, officials said. American officials also said they were not aware of the operation ahead of time and would have opposed the killing had they been consulted. Afterward, American officials admonished Ukrainian officials over the assassination, they said. The closely held assessment of Ukrainian complicity, which has not been previously reported, was shared within the U.S. government last week. Ukraine denied involvement in the killing immediately after the attack, and senior officials repeated those denials when asked about the American intelligence assessment. While Russia has not retaliated in a specific way for the assassination, the United States is concerned that such attacks — while high in symbolic value — have little direct impact on the battlefield and could provoke Moscow to carry out its own strikes against senior Ukrainian officials. American officials have been frustrated with Ukraine’s lack of transparency about its military and covert plans, especially on Russian soil. Since the beginning of the war, Ukraine’s security services have demonstrated their ability to reach into Russia to conduct sabotage operations. The killing of Ms. Dugina, however, would be one of the boldest operations to date — showing Ukraine can get very close to prominent Russians. Image In a handout photo released by the Investigative Committee of Russia, investigators worked at the scene of the car blast that killed Ms. Dugina.Credit…Investigative Committee Of Russia, via Agence France-Presse/Getty Images Some American officials suspect Ms. Dugina’s father, Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian ultranationalist, was the actual target of the operation, and that the operatives who carried it out believed he would be in the vehicle with his daughter. Mr. Dugin, one of Russia’s most prominent voices urging Moscow to intensify its war on Ukraine, has been a leading proponent of an aggressive, imperialist Russia. The American officials who spoke about the intelligence did not disclose which elements of the Ukrainian government were believed to have authorized the mission, who carried out the attack, or whether President Volodymyr Zelensky had signed off on the mission. United States officials briefed on the Ukrainian action and the American response spoke on the condition of anonymity, in order to discuss secret information and matters of sensitive diplomacy. U.S. officials would not say who in the American government delivered the admonishments or whom in the Ukrainian government they were delivered to. It was not known what Ukraine’s response was. The State of the War Russia’s Retreat: After significant military gains in eastern cities like Lyman, Ukraine is pushing farther into Russian-held territory in the south, expanding its campaign in yet another direction as Moscow struggles to mount a response and hold the line. Annexation Push: After Moscow’s proxies conducted a series of sham referendums in the Ukrainian regions of Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Luhansk and Donetsk, President Vladimir V. Putin declared the four territories to be part of Russia. Western leaders, including President Biden in the United States, denounced the annexation as illegal. Putin’s Nuclear Threats: For the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, top Russian leaders are making explicit nuclear threats and officials in Washington are gaming out scenarios should Mr. Putin decide to use a tactical nuclear weapon. Fleeing the Draft: Tens of thousands of men have left Russia to avoid being drafted to fight in Ukraine. Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet territory long seen in Russia as a source of cheap labor and backward ways, has provided a welcoming haven. While the Pentagon and spy agencies have shared sensitive battlefield intelligence with the Ukrainians, helping them zero in on Russian command posts, supply lines and other key targets, the Ukrainians have not always told American officials what they plan to do. The United States has pressed Ukraine to share more about its war plans, with mixed success. Earlier in the war, U.S. officials acknowledged that they often knew more about Russian war plans — thanks to their intense collection efforts — than they did about Kyiv’s intentions. Cooperation has since increased. During the summer, Ukraine shared its plans for its September military counteroffensive with the United States and Britain. U.S. officials also lack a complete picture of the competing power centers within the Ukrainian government, including the military, the security services and Mr. Zelensky’s office, a fact that may explain why some parts of the Ukrainian government may not have been aware of the plot. When asked about the U.S. intelligence assessment, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukraine’s president, reiterated the Ukrainian government’s denials of involvement in Ms. Dugina’s killing. “Again, I’ll underline that any murder during wartime in some country or another must carry with it some kind of practical significance,” Mr. Podolyak told The New York Times in an interview on Tuesday. “It should fulfill some specific purpose, tactical or strategic. Someone like Dugina is not a tactical or a strategic target for Ukraine. “We have other targets on the territory of Ukraine,” he said, “I mean collaborationists and representatives of the Russian command, who might have value for members of our special services working in this program, but certainly not Dugina.” Though details surrounding acts of sabotage in Russian-controlled territory have been shrouded in mystery, the Ukrainian government has quietly acknowledged killing Russian officials in Ukraine and sabotaging Russian arms factories and weapons depots. A senior Ukrainian military official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the topic, said that Ukrainian forces, with the help of local fighters, had carried out assassinations and attacks on accused Ukrainian collaborators and Russian officials in occupied Ukrainian territories. These include the Kremlin-installed head of the Kherson region, who was poisoned in August and had to be evacuated to Moscow for emergency treatment. Countries traditionally do not discuss other nations’ covert actions, for fear of having their own operations revealed, but some American officials believe it is crucial to curb what they see as dangerous adventurism, particularly political assassinations. Still, American officials in recent days have taken pains to insist that relations between the two governments remain strong. U.S. concerns about Ukraine’s aggressive covert operations inside Russia have not prompted any known changes in the provision of intelligence, military and diplomatic support to Mr. Zelensky’s government or to Ukraine’s security services. In a phone call on Saturday, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken told his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, that the Biden administration “will continue to support Ukraine’s efforts to regain control of its territory by strengthening its hand militarily and diplomatically,” according to Ned Price, the State Department’s spokesman. Officials from the State Department, National Security Council, Pentagon and C.I.A. declined to comment on the intelligence assessment. The war in Ukraine is at an especially dangerous moment. The United States has tried carefully to avoid unnecessary escalation with Moscow throughout the conflict — in part by telling Kyiv not to use American equipment or intelligence to conduct attacks inside of Russia. But now, the recent battlefield successes by Ukraine have prompted Russia to respond with a series of escalatory steps, like conducting a partial mobilization and moving to annex swathes of eastern Ukraine. Concern is growing in Washington that Russia may be considering further steps to intensify the war, including by renewing efforts to assassinate prominent Ukrainian leaders. Mr. Zelensky would be the top target of Russian assassination teams, as he was during the Russian assault on Kyiv earlier in the war. But now, American officials said Russia could target a wide variety of Ukrainian leaders, many of whom have less protection than Mr. Zelensky. The United States and Europe had imposed sanctions on Ms. Dugina. She shared her father’s worldview and was accused by the West of spreading Russian propaganda about Ukraine. Russia opened a murder investigation after Ms. Dugina’s assassination, calling the explosion that killed her a terrorist act. Ms. Dugina was killed instantly in the explosion, which occurred in the Odintsovo district, an affluent area in Moscow’s suburbs. After the bombing, speculation centered on whether Ukraine was responsible or if it was a false flag operation meant to pin blame on Ukrainians. The bombing took place after a series of Ukrainian strikes in Crimea, part of Ukraine that Russia seized in 2014. Those strikes had ...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
As Alex Jones Stands Trial, Newtown Would Rather Forget Him https://digitalalabamanews.com/as-alex-jones-stands-trial-newtown-would-rather-forget-him/ Nearly 10 years after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School — and the conspiracy theories propagated by Mr. Jones — Newtown residents are trying to move past their grief and anger. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. At Sandy Hook Cafe, Sue Bucur and Barb Baldino, both 59 and local residents, were not watching the trial but remained incensed about the role that Alex Jones had played in circulating falsehoods about the attack.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times Oct. 5, 2022Updated 1:55 p.m. ET NEWTOWN, Conn. — Less than 20 miles from the place where a gunman massacred 20 first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School, the man who has spent much of the decade since the attack spreading lies about what happened that day stood trial on Tuesday. The closely watched courtroom spectacle playing out just up Interstate 84 has featured wrenching testimony and explosive outbursts. But in Newtown, people are done talking about Alex Jones. “I think that most of the people in this town would like to forget about him, to forget his name,” said Richard Fattibene, 81, as he sat in the town’s general store having a coffee on Tuesday morning. The founder of the conspiracy website Infowars, Mr. Jones was found liable last year in four defamation lawsuits, and this week, a jury in nearby Waterbury, Conn., is expected to start deliberating about how much he should pay in compensatory and punitive damages. But for the very real town where his twisted fantasies were focused, the trial has been less a courtroom reckoning than an unwelcome reminder of the tragedy that has become synonymous with its name. Mr. Fattibene is semi-retired from his business selling parts to auto body shops. He recalled the brutal aftermath of the attack, the police cars on his street guarding the houses of children who had perished, the universal anguish. “The town was upside down,” he said. Image A school bus taking students home past the downtown area of Sandy Hook in Newtown, Conn.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times A friend who had joined him that morning, Dominic Calandruccio, 80, also semi-retired, from his job selling insurance, sounded a similar note. He hadn’t been following the Jones trial, but he had strong feelings about the man at its center. “We hate him,” he said, adding, “I hope he goes to jail.” Mr. Calandruccio, who moved to Newtown in 1978, thinking it would be a great place to raise his family, said he still loved the town, with its rolling hills, its well-preserved architecture and its access to nature. He often walks his dog near a site that is slated to become an animal sanctuary named for Catherine Violet Hubbard, a little girl lost in the tragedy who had loved animals. It left him dumbfounded that people could target victims’ families after what happened. “How can anybody be so cruel to those people?” he said of the conspiracy theorists who had harassed and stalked family members of the victims. Image Dominic Calandruccio, 80, has lived in Newtown since 1978. “How can anybody be so cruel to those people?” he said.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times Almost immediately after the attack, conspiracy theorists seized upon the toxic notion that the tragedy had been staged by the government as a pretext to advance gun control. It was trauma layered on trauma, and one of the key figures behind the lies was Mr. Jones, stoking the frenzy on his popular Infowars show and website. Mr. Jones and anguished families have both testified in that trial, and though he had been expected to take the stand again on Wednesday, he did not. A previous trial found him liable for nearly $50 million. In Connecticut, there are no limits on the damages, so the decision could ruin Mr. Jones financially. He has made millions hawking survivalist gear, diet supplements and gun accessories on his broadcasts — and was found to have violated a state law prohibiting the use of lies to sell products. At a cafe near the new Sandy Hook Elementary School — the old building was razed — Sue Bucur and Barb Baldino, both 59 and local residents, were catching up over lunch. They were not watching the trial, but they remained incensed about the role that Mr. Jones had played in circulating falsehoods. “For someone to deny what happened — he didn’t sit here and watch a line of hearses go by on the way to the cemetery,” said Ms. Bucur, who owns a crystal shop near the cafe. Ms. Baldino, who works in media sales, added that the money could not reverse the damage that had been done by the lies or the pain that the families had been subjected to during the trial. “I don’t know how you can punish him enough,” she said. “The money’s not going to do anything for anybody.” Image The Rev. Andrea Castner Wyatt, rector of the Trinity Episcopal Church, which organizes an annual interfaith service of remembrance.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times The Rev. Andrea Castner Wyatt, rector at Trinity Episcopal Church, has been painfully aware since she arrived in Newtown two years ago that the work of healing the trauma the town endured would be ongoing. The church helps organize an annual interfaith service of remembrance. The community hasn’t settled on a location for the service next month, which will mark 10 years since the attack. Part of the deepest distress is that mass shootings continue to take place around the country, she said. The church also hosted a well-attended vigil for the victims of the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting in May, which she said was painfully similar to the Sandy Hook attack. “They’ve had 10 years of learning what it’s like to live with this,” she said of the town. “That’s why their hearts really went out to Uvalde.” Image John Bergquist, 47, who grew up in Newtown, said the shadow of what had happened always looms.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times For John Bergquist, 47, the trial was a reminder of the political divisions roiling the country. He grew up in Newtown and works in a winery nearby, and was sipping a rosé at a favorite haunt, My Place, after work on Monday. “People have reached their saturation point with talking about the tragedy,” he said. “Not that they don’t care, but it’s been re-litigated so many times, it’s difficult.” But he added that the shadow of what had happened always loomed. “Even if you do stop talking about it, I think everybody feels a connection to what happened,” he said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
As Alex Jones Stands Trial Newtown Would Rather Forget Him
Weather Wagers: October 5 2022
Weather Wagers: October 5 2022
Weather Wagers: October 5, 2022 https://digitalalabamanews.com/weather-wagers-october-5-2022/ Hurricane Ian impact recap, fired head coaches, games of the week, how about those birds, plus baseball playoffs begin! Hurricane Ian forced some games to move last weekend and kept other games wet, including Penn State’s debacle as Northwestern came into a Soggy Valley. We look ahead to the Nittany Lions’ trip to Ann Arbor. A win is a win though and many teams can’t claim victory last week, weather or not. This week in the podcast we discuss new job openings in college football, some jobs that could become open after this coming weekend, and what to expect as the march toward the playoff really begins this month. Speaking of playoffs, the Phillies are in, and October baseball is ready to kick off. We discuss the MLB’s expanded field for this season and if the weather will play a role during the upcoming wild-card weekend. More Eagles talk too as they remain undefeated, and we have our games of the week picks and discuss our records so far. You can listen to the latest episode of Weather Wagers here and below is our in-depth column with our picks this week. Enjoy! ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Tennessee @ LSU, Saturday at Noon, Tiger Stadium, Baton Rouge, LA, Tennessee -3, O/U 63.5 The weather this weekend looks much quieter across the country as a whole and that includes at this interesting matchup in Baton Rouge. Sunny skies and highs in the 80s will make for a nice early October day featuring a matchup of two teams that don’t play each other often. LSU fans would prefer a night game in Tiger Stadium, but they aren’t in charge so an 11:00am local kickoff it is! The coaching matchup here is intriguing too with Josh Heupel trying to make Tennessee relevant again as a relatively young head coach and Brian Kelly trying to do the same with LSU as the veteran head coach. Both men are proven winners, and both come into this matchup riding high with solid records and looking to remain undefeated in SEC play. The Volunteers are coming off a bye and head into Tiger Stadium off momentum from beating their SEC East rival Florida two weeks ago. LSU only lost the opener to Florida State and since then has put together a nice stretch. Both teams would love a victory here to continue to be undefeated in the SEC and have a shot to get to Atlanta, albeit a long one. I think Hendon Hooker and his weapons, including Jalin Hyatt and Bru McCoy, will be enough to win a tough road game against a resurgent LSU. Brian Kelly’s team just doesn’t have the playmakers yet to compete for a full season. He will though, eventually, because his track record as a coach is as proven as it gets. I just think Tennessee is a step ahead this year. I like the Volunteers on the road to cover. Tennessee -3. North Carolina @ Miami, Saturday at 4:00pm, Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, FL, Miami -3.5, O/U 66 How in the world is Miami favored in this game? After two back-to-back embarrassing losses, one to Jimbo’s cratering Aggies and another to Middle Tennessee, how is Miami credible? I’m racking my brain here and the only reasons I can come up with are these: the game is at Miami, they are coached by Mario Cristobal, and Gene Chizik is Mack Brown’s defensive coordinator. That last point may be enough for me. Cristobal says he is sticking with QB Tyler Van Dyke despite a miserable performance against Middle Tennessee that saw him benched in the second half. I think Van Dyke and the Hurricanes will figure things out against one of the worst defenses in the nation. North Carolina ranks 120th out of 131 FBS schools in total defense. I think Miami needs a game to try and fix some of the things that ail them. While I don’t think Miami is very good, this feels like a spot where they could get one back. I think the public will be on the dog here but don’t count out the Hurricanes to take advantage of Chizik’s porous defense. This is one location that may have some weather to deal with as showers and thunderstorms are expected to be around the area Saturday afternoon. Perhaps a sloppy game is in order. But I’ll lay the points with the home favorite and hold my nose. Miami -3.5. Iowa @ Illinois, Saturday at 7:30p, Memorial Stadium, Champaign, IL, Illinois -3.5, O/U 35.5 This game has classic October Big Ten matchup written all over it. Low scoring. An October chill in the air, despite a perfectly sunny day on tap. Tailgate grills roaring. Hot apple cider steaming. I love the visuals here as Iowa travels to Champaign to take on an Illinois squad that just got Paul Chryst fired by drubbing Wisconsin at Camp Randall last weekend. If you are wondering why the Illini were able to dispose of the Badgers so handily…how about these numbers? Through five games, Illinois leads the nation in scoring defense, ranks third in total defense, and has the nation’s top RB with Chase Brown running wild each week. He already has over 700 yards on the season. It’s taking on an Iowa team that also has a stout defense (eighth nationally in total defense) but that makes you want to puke by watching its offense. In total offense, Iowa sits at 130th out of a possible 131 FBS teams. Putrid is too kind of a word. QB Spencer Petras and OC Brian Ferentz are both liabilities for this team and having to go on the road won’t help. Can I make this one a double, please?! Give me Bert to cover the 3.5 at home and I’ll take the under with the Illini scoring most of the points in this one. Giants @ Packers, Sunday at 9:30a, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London, Packers -8, O/U 41.5 This is also a weird line to me as we move to NFL play in Week 5. This is at least a fun matchup for Londoners to witness unlike most of the games we export to them. The Packers struggled last week at home against the Patriots and now have to play outside the United States for the first time. It’s not a great set-up. Both teams are 3-1 coming into this game and the Giants appear to be ascending under head coach Brian Daboll. I like what he has going so far, warts and all. Saquon Barkley appears healthy and ready for the moment. While no team likes traveling this far to play a game, I think the Giants can keep this close. If Daboll can keep the ball with Barkley and out of Aaron Rodgers’ hands then they can likely make this a four-quarter game. I said it early in the year, but something seems off about the Packers. I expect that to continue despite their winning record. Giants +8 from Tottenham Hotspur Stadium where the weather looks perfect under sunny skies and highs in the 60s. Eagles @ Cardinals, Sunday at 4:25pm, State Farm Stadium, Glendale, AZ, Eagles -5, O/U 49 No team has impressed me more than the Philadelphia Eagles. They come prepared to play (despite a slow start to the Jags last week, blame it on the weather!), they look physical when needed, they appear balanced, and they look comfortable. Now they head west to take on a team that has been a bit of a thorn in their side. The Cardinals actually have a winning record against the Eagles in the all-time series. They have a 60-56-5 record against the Birds. That includes a victory over the Eagles last time they traveled out west in 2020. The Eagles typically don’t play well in Arizona, at least from my memories. But I think that changes here. The Cardinals are 2-2 on the year and Kyler Murray is a fine QB that can make some plays, but I’m not sure he can make enough of them. The defense has been sketchy to this point for the Cardinals as well and that should give Jalen Hurts and OC Shane Steichen a chance to score some points. Everything seems to be clicking right now for the only undefeated team in the NFL. I’ll take the Eagles and the 5 on the road. E-A-G-L-E-S EAGLES! Purdue @ Maryland, Saturday at Noon, SECU Stadium, College Park, MD, Maryland -3, O/U 59.5 Purdue traveling to College Park may not excite many people nationally, but this has the chance to be a sneaky good Big Ten game that will tell us a lot about both teams. That’s why we have selected the Boilermakers against the Terps as our Under the Radar game of the week. This will feature two veteran QBs in Taulia Tagovailoa against Aiden O’Connell. Both have some weapons at wide receiver, especially O’Connell in Charlie Jones. But guess what? So does Tua’s little brother. All 4 of Maryland’s top receivers (Rakim Jarrett, Jeshuan Jones, Corey Dyches, and Jacob Copeland) have over 200 yards and at least one touchdown on the young season so far! Both defenses are spotty and both come into this matchup with wins last weekend, including Purdue’s upset of Minnesota. I want to pick Maryland here as I think they just have strong Jimmy’s and Joe’s – but Purdue could be riding that Minny momentum into College Park and try and get a sneaky win. Given the weather looks perfect, I’ll stay away from a side and take the over here. Over 59.5 is the pick. South Carolina @ Kentucky, Saturday @ 7:30pm, Kroger Field, Lexington, KY, Kentucky -10.5, O/U 49 Kentucky lost a heartbreaker last week at Vaught-Hemingway to the Ole Miss defense no less. I don’t think Kentucky is the type of team to let a team beat them twice, however. Mark Stoops is tough mentally and that seems to translate to his team. I think returning to Kroger Field and having South Carolina come to town is exactly what the football doctor ordered to get Kentucky back on track in the SEC East. South Carolina isn’t there yet with Shane Beamer and the transfer QB Spencer Rattler (a one-time Heisman favorite at Oklahoma). They haven’t found their footing and don’t yet have the athletes to stay with Kentucky on either side of the ball. If Mark Stoops can hit the reset button and if Will Levis can shake off the last play of the game last week, this team should be just fine going forward. I like Kentucky’s defense to come out snarling and never give the Gamecocks much of a chance. Ken...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Weather Wagers: October 5 2022
USBands Weekend Preview: What Shows Are Happening & What
USBands Weekend Preview: What Shows Are Happening & What
USBands Weekend Preview: What Shows Are Happening & What https://digitalalabamanews.com/usbands-weekend-preview-what-shows-are-happening-what/ Fourteen USBands shows are on the competition docket this weekend, and fans can stream three of those shows LIVE on FloMarching on October 8th and 9th. Here’s a brief overview of what USBands shows are going on this weekend, what you can stream, and who’s competing where.  Stream LIVE On FloMarching The Ludwig Musser Classic October 8 | East Rutherford, NJ Start Time: 8:30am ET WATCH LIVE The Ludwig Musser Classic will take place on October 8th at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ. A slate of over fifty competitors is set to kick off at 8:30am with Weehawken High School (IA) and continue throughout the day in earnest, with the last group set to take the field at 10:49pm. I – V A classes will be fully represented in addition to a handful of I, II, IV, and V Open programs. Fans can expect to see performances from Long Branch High School (IA), Hackettstown High School (IIA), Vernon Township High School (IIIA), Somerville High School (IVA), New Hartford High School (VA), and many more in the A Class. Open Class competitors will include South Brunswick High School (V Open), Liverpool High School (IV Open), Fair Lawn High School (II Open) and more. The competing groups at the Ludwig Musser Classic will only compete once, so be sure to tune in early so you don’t miss your favorite ensembles take the field! The Ludwig Musser Classic – Texas Edition October 8 | Converse, TX Start time: 9:30am CT WATCH LIVE The Ludwig Musser Classic – Texas Edition will take place on October 8th at D.W. Rutledge Stadium in Converse, TX. A group of over twenty competitors will take the field for Prelims competition beginning at 9:30am with La Pryor High School (IA), with the last Prelims performance beginning at 3:45pm. Following the Prelims Awards, the announcement of the Finalist groups, and a short break, Finals competition will start back up at 7:00pm. FInals performances will conclude with the last group at 9:30pm and the Finals awards ceremony will begin at 10:00pm. Audiences can look forward to performances from Byron P. Steele High School (VA), John Marshall High School (IVA), Earl Warren High School (III), and many more. USBands Southeast Showdown October 9 | Montgomery, AL Start Time: 9:00am CT WATCH LIVE The USBands Southeast Showdown will take place on October 9th at the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, AL. Fourteen programs will be competing for top honors, with the first group stepping off at 9:00am. Fans can look forward to performances from Memphis Central High School (VA), G.W. Carver High School (IVA), Pleasant Grove High School (IIIA), and many more. In addition to the competitive performances, there will be three exhibition performances from three college programs: Huntington College Marching Band, Alabama State University Drum Majors and Drumline, and the Talladega College Marching Band.  More USBands Shows Happening This Weekend USBands Austin Regional October 8 | Buda, TX Start Time: 11:30am CT Performances From:  Navarro Early College High School (IIA) Cedar Creek High School (IIIA) William J. Brennan High School (IVA) and more More Info USBands Burleson Regional October 8 | Burleson, TX Start Time: 11:30am CT Performance From: Crowley High School (IIA) Lakeview Centennial High School (IVA) Alvarado High School (III Open) and more More Info USBands Leonardtown High School October 8 | Leonardtown, MD Start Time: 3:00pm ET Performances From: Great Mills High School (II Open) Huntingtown High School (IA) Northern High School (IA) and more More Info USBands Norwalk High School October 8 | Norwalk, CT Start Time: 5:00pm ET Performances From: Bethel High School (IIA) Brien McMahon High School (IVA) Frank Scott Bunnell High School (VA) and more More Info USBands Cheshire High School October 8 | Cheshire, CT Start Time: 6:00pm ET Performances From: East Have High School (IA) Francis T. Maloney High School (VA) Naugatuck High School (III Open) With Exhibition Performances From: Worcester Polytechnic Institute University of New Haven University of Connecticut More Info USBands Kings Philip High School October 8 | Wrentham, MA Start Time: 6:00pm ET Performances From: Rockville High School (IA) Stoughton High School (IVA) Dartmouth High School (V Open) and more More Info USBands Williamsport High School October 8 | Williamsport, MD Start Time: 6:00pm ET Performances From: Heritage High School (IA) New Oxford High School (III Open) Potomac Falls High School (IIIA) and more More Info USBands Burlington City High School October 8 | Burlington, NJ Start Time: 6:00pm ET Performances From: Seneca High School (IIA) Delran High School (II Open) Egg Harbor Township High School (IV Open) and more More Info USBands North Brunswick High School October 8 | North Brunswick Township, NJ Start Time: 6:00pm ET Performances From: Columbia High School (IIA) Allentown High School (II Open) Union High School (IA) and more More Info USBands Perkiomen Valley High School October 8 | Collegeville, PA Start TIme: 6:00pm ET Performances From: Great Valley High School (IIA) Quakertown Community High School (IV Open) Downingtown West High School (V Open) and more More Info USBands Bergenfield High School October 9 | Bergenfield, NJ Start Time: 1:00pm ET Performances From: Oceanside High School (IA) New MIlford High School (IIA) Fort Lee High School (VA) and more More Info Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
USBands Weekend Preview: What Shows Are Happening & What
OBITUARIES: Wednesday October 5 2022
OBITUARIES: Wednesday October 5 2022
OBITUARIES: Wednesday, October 5, 2022 https://digitalalabamanews.com/obituaries-wednesday-october-5-2022/ Edna E. Thompson Albertville Edna E. Thompson, 87, of Albertville, died Sept. 30, 2022, at Marshall Medical Center South. Services were Monday, Oct. 3, 2022, at Adams Brown Service Funeral Home Chapel with Bro. Jimmy Rowell officiating. Burial was in Memory Hill Cemetery. Survivors include a daughter, Pam Gafford (Joel); son, Mark Thompson (Lana) sister, Delana Roden; and two grandsons. Emma Johnson Gadsden Emma Johnson, 78, of Gadsden, passed away Friday, Sept. 30, 2022, at Riverview Regional Medical Center. At this time no services are planned. The family has chosen cremation. Etowah Memorial Chapel assisted the family. Mrs. Johnson is survived by her daughter, Juanita Dowdy (Keith); five grandchildren; sister, Irene Lyles; and several nieces and nephews. Rebecca Sue Hayes Sims Albertville Rebecca Sue Hayes Sims, 73, of Albertville, passed away Friday, Sept. 30, 2022, at Marshall Medical Center North. Her funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2022, at Albertville Memorial Chapel with burial to follow at Marshall Memorial Gardens. Rev. Justin Childers will be officiating. Mrs. Sims is survived by her daughter, Alisha Sims Blaisdell; son, Phillip Sims (Michele); six grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; brother, Ronnie Hayes (Joyce); and sisters-in-law, Bobbie Hayes and Gail Cambron. Shelby Jean Dunn Blountsville Shelby Jean Dunn, 66, of Blountsville, passed away Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022, at Shepherd’s Cove Hospice. Funeral services were Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022, at Mountain Grove Baptist Church 1770 Co Rd. 573 Hanceville, Alabama 35077. Burial followed in the adjoining cemetery. Etowah Memorial Chapel assisted the family. She is survived by her daughters, Rachel Leann Holcomb and Jennifer Finley; three grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; sisters, Sherrie Coan, Diane Gholson and Mary Evans; and brothers, Lavern, Marlin and Ronnie Richards. Steven W. Cordell Guntersville Steven W. Cordell, 54, of Guntersville, died Oct. 2, 2022, at Marshall Medical Center North. Memorial services will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2022, at Adams Brown Service Funeral Home Chapel with Bro. Ronnie Craft officiating. Visitation will be from 2 to 3 p.m. at the funeral home. Survivors include his wife, Cheryl Cordell; daughters, Madison Karr and Samantha Helms; a son, Steven Lee Cordell; mother, Doris Cordell; brothers, Jon Cordell and Jeff Green; and eight grandchildren. Terrie Esenwein Crossville Terrie Esenwein, 58, of Crossville, died Sept. 28, 2022, at her residence. No services are planned at this time. Adams Brown Service Funeral Home assisted the family. Survivors include her husband, James Parsons; daughters, Crystal Leonard (Antonie Nichols) and Tara Esenwein; mother, Barbara Sissom; sister, Penny Mendez (Michael Mendez); brothers, Jack Sissom (Michelle) and Sean Avery; nine grandchildren; one great-granddaughter. Patsy Ann Willoughby Crossville Patsy Ann Willoughby, 74, of Crossville, died Oct. 2, 2022, at Shepherd’s Cove Hospice. Memorial services will be Oct. 9, 2022, at 4 p.m. at Victory Baptist church in Kilpatrick with Geraldine Funeral Home assisting the family. Survivors include her husband, Larry Willoughby; sons, Tim Willoughby and Todd Willoughby; sisters, Myrl Camp and Marilyn Ridgeway; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. Betty Rowan Morgan Boaz Mrs. Betty Rowan Morgan, 83, of Boaz, died on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022, at Diversicare of Boaz. Funeral service was Monday, Oct. 3, 2022, at McRae Chapel with Bro. Shannon Black officiating. Mrs. Morgan is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Tony and Patti Morgan, of Gadsden; daughters and son-in-law, Tammy and Greg McDowell, of Boaz, and Sandy Morgan; 13 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren: Lucas Gross, Maxwell Morgan, Miles Musick, and Charlie McDowell. Dr. Jerry Russell “Russ” Robinson Albertville Dr. Jerry Russell “Russ” Robinson, 61, of Albertville, died on Friday, Sept. 23, 2022, at Huntsville Hospital. Funeral services were Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022, at McRae Funeral Home Chapel with burial in Memory Hill Cemetery. Dr. Robinson is survived by his wife, Kim Robinson; son, Jerry Tanner Robinson, of Albertville; daughter, Emily and Jacob Davis, of Albertville; a grandson; mother, Peggy and Roger Eaton, of Gadsden; aunt and uncle, Sue and Danny Foster, of Pell City; and parents-in-law, Wayne and Priscilla Gober, of Albertville; brothers-in-law, Jeremey and Marilyn Webb and Scott and Lorie Gober; and a host of nieces and nephews. The family suggest in lieu of flowers donations to the Huntsville Hospital Foundation, 801 Clinton Ave. East, Huntsville, AL 35801and specify to the Palliative Care Fund with a note that the gift is in memory of Dr. Jerry Russell Robinson, or 2nd Chance Animal Shelter, 130 County Road 398, Boaz, AL 35957. ——— Obituaries are printed as a public service by The Reporter. Customized obituaries may be printed for a charge. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
OBITUARIES: Wednesday October 5 2022
IUE-CWA Files Unfair Labor Practices Charges Against General Electric
IUE-CWA Files Unfair Labor Practices Charges Against General Electric
IUE-CWA Files Unfair Labor Practices Charges Against General Electric https://digitalalabamanews.com/iue-cwa-files-unfair-labor-practices-charges-against-general-electric/ The IUE-CWA has filed unfair labor practices charges against General Electric after the dismissal of two pro-union workers at the GE Aviation Auburn plant, one of whom is a pregnant mother. The union additionally alleges that the Auburn facility threatened pro-union workers, surveilled and intimidated pro-union workers, and interfered with “protected union activity”, according to a release sent on Tuesday. Workers at the Auburn GE factory announced their intent to organize just a few weeks prior. Brenyetta Tally, one of the two fired workers at the GE plant and a pregnant mother already supporting two children, said in a statement on Tuesday that the move to fire her at GE was a deliberate instant from management to “silence our voices” at the plant. “As a mother with a high-risk pregnancy supporting two kids and my dad who has cancer, I needed this job to provide for my family,” Tally said in the statement on Tuesday. “Since I started at GE Auburn in 2016, I received multiple awards for my production quality and never had an issue until workers like me started speaking out about unfair treatment at the plant and began organizing a union.” Tally said that she was forced to “take a grinder position” with little to no training, where she had to lift 60-pound bags multiple times daily. Tall added that she “began to see managers watching me and observing my line multiple times each day” and, while taking a phone call in an approved area concerning her father’s cancer treatment, GE managers “used this as an excuse to fire me”, according to Tally. “I am standing together with GE Auburn workers to form a union because we want the freedom to make our voices heard for the better pay and benefits we have earned,” Tally said. “This GE union-busting has to stop now.” Tyrone Dawkins, a second worker at the Auburn facility who was fired in alleged retaliation for his pro-union stance, said that GE had fired him for his pro-union stance despite a favorable performance test. “When I started at GE Auburn, they promised opportunities to build my skills and grow in the job. GE broke that promise when they fired me last month after learning I was pro-union,” Dawkins said in a statement on Tuesday. “I recently passed a performance test with flying colors, and I received strong support from my trainer and another co-worker. When I struggled in a second area, GE was supposed to provide a chance to try a different department. Instead, GE used this as an excuse to fire me, despite three different co-workers saying they had never seen managers refuse to allow an employee to move to a different department. We deserve better from a company making billions of dollars off the backs of our labor, and that’s why I am standing together with GE Auburn workers to demand managers recognize our union and end the scare tactics trying to silence us. We are not backing down.” Organizing members at the approximately 180-worker facility filed in late August to be represented by IUE-CWA, with a “strong majority” of the plant’s workers in favor of forming a union, according to CBS News. “GE workers in Alabama are fighting back against this illegal union-busting and demanding that this giant corporation be held accountable,” said IUE-CWA Conference Board Chairman Jerry Carney in a statement on Tuesday. “There is no excuse for GE firing, surveilling, and intimidating these Alabama workers who are exercising their right to form a union for the strong voice on the job and better pay and working conditions they have earned.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
IUE-CWA Files Unfair Labor Practices Charges Against General Electric
Thousands Expected For Trump Rally On Saturday
Thousands Expected For Trump Rally On Saturday
Thousands Expected For Trump Rally On Saturday https://digitalalabamanews.com/thousands-expected-for-trump-rally-on-saturday/ Kurt HIldebrand / The Record-Courier Organizers are predicting 10,000-plus supporters at former President Donald Trump’s Save America Rally on Saturday but if the attendance is anything like 2020’s, it’ll be more than three times that number. Douglas County commissioners are scheduled to hear an events and conditional use permit for the event at Minden-Tahoe Airport during their Thursday meeting. Much of the airport will be tied up starting Thursday as organizers set up for the event, which will be 2-9 p.m. Saturday. Clean-up will occur on Sunday and Monday. Save America PAC is conducting the rally and will be charged $2,500 for the use of the airport. “Minden-Tahoe Airport does not anticipate any lost revenue as a result of this event,” county officials said. According to the county, until Sept. 28 when The Record-Courier first reported the event, it was to take place on Sunday. But because of a scheduling conflict, it was moved up to Saturday. Tickets are available at donaldjtrump.com, which says that gates open at 2 p.m. for the rally which starts at 7 p.m. Trump is coming to support Republican U.S. senate candidate Adam Laxalt. Trump previously visited on Sept. 12, 2020, when he was in office. He ended up at Minden after an effort to hold a rally in Reno was halted by airport officials over coronavirus restrictions. Sen. James Settelmeyer, who attended, observed that the rally in Minden drew a substantially larger crowd than the one held a short time later in Las Vegas. Reports from two years ago is that officials stopped counting at 28,000 people. Residents who plan on attending should arrive early. According to the permit, there will be food and drink available for purchase at the event. The rally will be the third major event drawing thousands of people to Carson Valley over three weekends. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Thousands Expected For Trump Rally On Saturday
Opinion: The Rising Waters That Threaten Us All
Opinion: The Rising Waters That Threaten Us All
Opinion: The Rising Waters That Threaten Us All https://digitalalabamanews.com/opinion-the-rising-waters-that-threaten-us-all/ While on a recent trip to Yellowstone National Park (before the devastating spring floods), I listened to a 2017 book by Jeff Goodell called “The Water Will Come.” In Yellowstone, the power of water over eons is on display — especially at its own Grand Canyon. There you can see the waterfall that carved it out over millennia — of course, no one observed this directly, but the evidence is there. The power of water is truly amazing! Goodell starts with a fictional apocalyptic telling of a hurricane that could strike Florida in 2027 and then goes on to tell the story of the building of Miami Beach on silt in the 1930s. In subsequent chapters, he builds the case for the dramatic impact climate change is having on sea levels. We are all aware of the dire warnings of what increasing carbon dioxide levels are causing, but sometimes it is hard to process, because aside from storms like Ian most of the time there is little evidence right in front of us. In another chapter, Goodell tells the story of an Ohio State University climate expert, Jason Box, who in 2012 predicted that due to the fires in the western United States, lots of carbon particles would be deposited on the snow and ice in Greenland, and that as a result more sunlight would be absorbed, causing warming and even more rapid ice melting. His prediction was scoffed at by other experts but the next spring there was record melting and Professor Box was vindicated. I am telling this story because it is difficult to get people to understand how ash and even seemingly innocuous little molecules like CO2 and H2O can be so powerful. There are several aspects that need to be understood. First, water is the most common chemical we ever deal with (and on earth), Second, everyone knows there are two common forms: the liquid we need to survive and the ice we use to chill drinks, preserve food, and enjoy in winter sports. Of course, there is a third form — water vapor — that will be addressed below. So, let’s go back to its liquid and solid forms. It may not be commonly appreciated what a unique planet our Earth is as it not only has liquid water but also lots of ice. The ice is locked up at the poles (both as land-based ice and icebergs), as well as at other northern latitudes and at high altitudes in mountain glaciers. The equilibrium that exists between the different forms of water has been here for millions of years with natural shifts sometimes bringing on ice ages alternating with warming periods. The Earth has survived — thank goodness! But now an “unnatural” factor has been introduced into the ice-water equilibrium equation — human activity resulting from the Industrial Revolution. Dating back to the mid-17th century, resourceful humans figured out ways to perform tasks to relieve human drudgery by using fossil fuels to power new machines like the steam engine, originally invented to pump water out of coal mines. Atmospheric science teaches us that more carbon dioxide leads to atmospheric warming. Warmer temperatures and warmer oceans mean more water evaporates, leading to more frequent and powerful tropical storms. The former plus the melting ice caps on land lead to rising sea levels, so as coastal residents we should all be concerned. A recent story described the common occurrence of flooding (even without storms on so-called blue sky days) on Union Street near Union Station and the Police Station. The city of New Haven is concerned enough that plans are in the works to build a seawall near Long Wharf. Seawalls are not a new idea. In Holland, the Mansell Wall has been built near Rotterdam. In Venice, a massive (and ingenious) project called Moses consists of steel container walls that when filled with water rest on the bottom of the lagoon. With an approaching storm or water surge, air is used to force the water out, and the walls float up and block surging water. Of course, seawalls have problems. In 2011, a seawall protecting the Fukushima nuclear power plant was overwhelmed by a tsunami, resulting in a nuclear disaster. During Sandy, lower Manhattan was inundated, so now there is a plan to build a seawall starting on East 25th Street to protect lower Manhattan (it’s been dubbed the Big U). Another problem with seawalls is that they are temporary solutions because with the burning of fossil fuels more and more heat-absorbing carbon dioxide is produced exacerbating atmospheric warming and fueling the melting of even more ice. But building seawalls will buy us time so that other long-range solutions can be developed and implemented. The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report projects that without a drastic reduction in the burning of fossil fuels, U.S. coastal sea levels could rise by two to seven feet by 2100. This would displace millions of our citizens and billions of people all around the globe who live near water (lots of Florida land would disappear). What’s to be done? First, we need to recognize that the planet will survive, but people will be dramatically impacted. Slowly earth’s inhabitants are taking steps to modulate climate warming — solar power, wind turbines and electric vehicles will help. But this needs to be done globally with multi-country cooperation. That is the main goal of the Paris Accord that the U.S. has recently rejoined — but much more needs to be done. Human engineers have taken on mega-projects like the Hoover Damn but restoring the global climate will be a giga-project! To end, it is appropriate to note that we could have had a nearly 15 year head start on “solving” this problem had we heeded Al Gore’s warning in his book and 2007 movie, “An Inconvenient Truth.” Water trivia: 1) what does one cubic meter of water weigh? 2) What is the mass of water that falls on an acre of land with a 1-inch rainfall? You can use Google or write to the author at fgasparro@hamdenhallorg. Frank Gasparro, of Branford, teaches AP Chemistry at Hamden Hall Country Day school and also serves as director of their signature STEM program called Science, Innovation & Design whose main goal is to encourage students to participate in State and National Science Fairs. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Opinion: The Rising Waters That Threaten Us All
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene? https://digitalalabamanews.com/mar-a-lago-documents-why-is-donald-trump-asking-the-supreme-court-to-intervene/ Former President Donald Trump has once again brought a fight over documents to the nation’s highest court, though his record on such appeals is spotty at best. Trump filed an emergency appeal Tuesday at the Supreme Court in the dispute over seized documents. The former president wants a special master in the case to review the classified documents. The Supreme Court has given the Justice Department until Tuesday to respond. WASHINGTON – Former President Donald Trump filed an emergency appeal at the Supreme Court in the ongoing dispute over documents seized at his Mar-a-Lago club in early August. The request is narrow, but it has once again thrust the nation’s highest court into a political controversy involving the former president who nominated three of its members. Here’s a look at what we know about the filing and what comes next.  What did Trump file at the Supreme Court? Former President Donald Trump filed what’s known as an emergency application challenging part of a Sept. 21 ruling from the Atlanta-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. That ruling allowed the Justice Department to continue reviewing classified documents seized at Trump’s Florida estate and blocked a lower court’s ruling requiring the government to submit the documents to an independent arbiter, or special master, for review. Trump’s appeal challenges the second part of that ruling and if he wins then the special master, U.S. District Judge Raymond Dearie, would review the documents.  Filing: Trump asks Supreme Court to weigh in on review of classified documents seized from Mar-a-Lago Appeals: Court grants DOJ investigative access to classified seized documents Why did Trump file a Supreme Court appeal?  The 47-page document is pretty technical and it raises questions about whether the 11th Circuit had jurisdiction to rule the way it did. Trump’s ostensible argument is about having an independent entity review the documents, not just the Justice Department. The appeal is sprinkled with references to the “unprecedented circumstances” of the seizure, “an investigation of the Forty-Fifth President of the United States by the administration of his political rival and successor.” Any limit on a transparent review of the documents, Trump’s lawyers told the Supreme Court, “erodes public confidence in our system of justice.” What is Trump’s record at the Supreme Court? Trump’s record at the nation’s highest court is not great. In January, for instance, the Supreme Court refused to block the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack from getting Trump’s administration documents. In 2020, the court ruled that Trump could not keep his tax returns and financial records away from a New York City prosecutor who was pursuing possible hush-money payments during the 2016 White House race. That prosecutor did not seek reelection and two of his deputies who had been leading a criminal probe departed the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in  February.   Loss: Supreme Court refuses to block House Jan. 6 panel from receiving Trump documents Taxes: Supreme Court says President Trump cannot keep tax, financial records from prosecutors How soon could the Supreme Court act in Trump’s case? The emergency application docket – known colloquially as the “shadow docket” – can move quite quickly. It is often used, for instance, to handle last-minute appeals for people on death row and facing execution in a matter of hours. However, the court seemed to pump the brakes on the case hours after Trump’s filing. Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, who handles such emergency appeals rising from the 11th Circuit, gave the federal government until Tuesday to respond. That’s fast by Supreme Court standards, but it’s not as speedy as these cases sometimes can move.  Redistricting: Alabama redistricting case renews fight among justices Abortion: Texas abortion ruling renews criticism of Supreme Court’s ‘shadow docket’ Who’s the special master in Trump’s case?   On Sept. 15, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon appointed a semi-retired federal judge in Brooklyn, Raymond Dearie, to review the thousands of documents seized at Trump’s Florida estate. Dearie, 78, was agreed to by both Trump and the Department of Justice. Dearie is reviewing some of the documents FBI agents seized Aug. 8 at Mar-a-Lago for personal records and documents that potentially are protected by attorney-client privilege or executive privilege.  What are experts saying about Trump’s Supreme Court appeal? Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, noted on Twitter that Trump’s “track record in the Supreme Court in cases involving him personally (as opposed to his official actions as president) has been abysmal.” On Thomas’ week-out deadline for the government to respond, Vladeck wrote that “this delay doesn’t help Trump. At all. It’s a pretty big sign from Thomas that even *he* isn’t in a hurry, which does not bode well for Trump’s chances of getting the full court to side with him.” Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor, agreed. “It means that he doesn’t view this as the ’emergency’ that Trump claims it is,” Mariotti posted on Twitter. “This narrow move for Supreme Court review sure looks like an effort by Trump’s attorneys to find an excuse to litigate something to placate their client, even though ‘winning’ would not achieve anything substantial.” Contributing: Bart Jansen, Kevin Johnson, Kevin McCoy  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Biden Setting Politics Aside Joins Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis To Survey Hurricane Ians Wrath
Biden Setting Politics Aside Joins Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis To Survey Hurricane Ians Wrath
Biden, Setting Politics Aside, Joins Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis To Survey Hurricane Ian’s Wrath https://digitalalabamanews.com/biden-setting-politics-aside-joins-florida-gov-ron-desantis-to-survey-hurricane-ians-wrath/ President Biden was set to tour hurricane-ravaged Florida Wednesday side by side with Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis as the fierce rivals set politics aside to work together on the storm recovery. With nearly 100 dead and damage estimated in the tens of billions of dollars, both leaders want to show suffering residents that they can leave partisan politics behind when people’s lives and livelihoods are on the line. The White House says there will be plenty of time to score political points in the coming weeks before the midterm elections. “When it comes to delivering and making sure that the people of Florida have what they need, especially after Hurricane Ian, we are one,” White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters. “We are working as one.” The usually pugnacious DeSantis also has avoided taking pot shots at Biden since Ian struck and praised the work of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in responding to the storm. “We appreciate it. I think FEMA’s worked very well with the state and local (workers),” DeSantis said. Water floods a damaged trailer park in Fort Myers, Fla., on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022, after Hurricane Ian passed by the area. (Steve Helber/AP) Biden planned to take a helicopter tour of some of the worst-hit areas and meet with residents and small business owners in Fort Myers, Florida. He will also thank government officials providing emergency aid and removing debris. Hurricane Ian has killed at least 84 people confirmed dead, including 75 in Florida. Gyndreds of thousands of people wait for power to be restored. Ian’s 150 mph winds and punishing storm surge last week ravaged thousands of homes especially on barrier islands like Sanibel, Captiva and Fort Myers Beach. Many people are unable to access food and water. For many of Sanibel’s 6,000 year-round residents, Wednesday marked the first time they will get the chance to return to see whether their homes survived and how bad the damage is. With the only bridge to the island destroyed, it will likely be many months before they can return to anything resembling a normal life. President Joe Biden speaks about Hurricane Ian during a visit to FEMA headquarters, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Washington. (Evan Vucci/AP) Biden and DeSantis are fierice political rivals and may even face off in the 2024 race for the White House. They have clashed bitterly how to fight COVID-19, immigration policy and other major issues. In recent weeks, they tussled over the governor’s decision to put migrants on planes or buses to Democratic strongholds, a practice that Biden has called “reckless.” Biden was planning to visit Florida to slam Republican proposals that he says would weaken Social Security and Medicare. The hurricane quickly changed the purpose and tone of Biden’s trip. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference at the Pinellas County Emergency Operations Center, Monday, Sept. 26, 2022, in Largo, Fla. (Chris O’Meara/AP) The message of bipartisan unity marks a difference from former President Donald Trump, who at times threatened to withhold aid to Democratic officials during crises. At other times, Trump appeared insensitive or clumsy in his response to people’s suffering, like when he tossed paper towels to a crowd during a visit to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico. People stand on the destroyed bridge to Pine Island as they view the damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Matlacha, Fla., Sunday, Oct. 2, 2022. (Gerald Herbert/AP) Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie once welcomed President Barack Obama to his state to survey Hurricane Sandy damage just days before the 2012 general election. The cordial display was credited with boosting Obama’s reelection push, but Christie said he has no regrets about working across the aisle. “The best political strategy is to have no political strategy,” he said. “To do your job.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Biden Setting Politics Aside Joins Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis To Survey Hurricane Ians Wrath
OPEC To Cut Oil Production By 2 Million Barrels Per Day To Shore Up Prices Defying U.S. Pressure
OPEC To Cut Oil Production By 2 Million Barrels Per Day To Shore Up Prices Defying U.S. Pressure
OPEC+ To Cut Oil Production By 2 Million Barrels Per Day To Shore Up Prices, Defying U.S. Pressure https://digitalalabamanews.com/opec-to-cut-oil-production-by-2-million-barrels-per-day-to-shore-up-prices-defying-u-s-pressure/ Oil prices have fallen to roughly $80 from over $120 in early June amid growing fears about the prospect of a global economic recession. Bloomberg | Getty Images A group of some of the world’s most powerful oil producers on Wednesday agreed to impose deep output cuts, seeking to spur a recovery in crude prices despite calls from the U.S. to pump more to help the global economy. OPEC and non-OPEC allies, a group often referred to as OPEC+, decided at their first face-to-face gathering since 2020 to reduce production by 2 million barrels per day from November. Energy market participants had expected OPEC+, which includes Saudi Arabia and Russia, to impose output cuts of somewhere between 500,000 barrels and 2 million barrels. The move represents a major reversal in production policy for the alliance, which slashed output by a record 10 million barrels per day in early 2020 when demand crashed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The oil cartel has since gradually unwound those record cuts, albeit with several OPEC+ countries struggling to fulfill their quotas. Oil prices have fallen to roughly $80 a barrel from over $120 in early June amid growing fears about the prospect of a global economic recession. The production cut for November is an attempt to reverse this slide, despite rerepeated pressure from U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration for the group to pump more to lower fuel prices ahead of midterm elections next month. International benchmark Brent crude futures traded at $92.82 a barrel during afternoon deals in London, up around 1.1%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures, meanwhile, stood at $87.37, almost 1% higher. OPEC+ will hold its next meeting on Dec. 4. ‘Selfishly motivated’ Energy analysts said the actual impact of the group’s supply cuts for November was likely to be limited, with unilateral cuts by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq and Kuwait likely to do the main job. What’s more, analysts said it is currently difficult for OPEC+ to form a view more than a month or two into the future as the energy market faces the uncertainty of more European sanctions on non-OPEC producer Russia — including on shipping insurance, price caps and reduced petroleum imports. “In its own words, OPEC’s mission is to ensure an adequate pricing environment for both consumers and producers. Yet the decision to reduce output in the current environment runs counter to this objective,” Stephen Brennock, a senior analyst at PVM Oil Associates in London, said in a research note. “Further squeezing already-tight supplies will be a slap in the face for consumers. The selfishly motivated move is aimed purely at benefiting producers,” he added. “In short, OPEC+ is prioritising price above stability at a time of great uncertainty in the oil market.” Rohan Reddy, director of research at Global X ETFs, told CNBC that the group’s decision to impose production cuts could see oil prices rally back to $100 a barrel — assuming no major bouts of Covid globally and the U.S. Federal Reserve not becoming unexpectedly hawkish. “Due to the decision, volatility will likely return to the market, and despite concerns about the resilience of the global economy, the oil market is tight, all of which should serve as a tailwind for prices in the fourth quarter,” Reddy said. He added that while a return to $100 oil is possible, “a more likely scenario in the short term is that oil prices hover in the $90 to $100 range as the market digests economic data releases.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
OPEC To Cut Oil Production By 2 Million Barrels Per Day To Shore Up Prices Defying U.S. Pressure
Putin's Troops Are Retreating Even As He Formalizes Russia's Annexation
Putin's Troops Are Retreating Even As He Formalizes Russia's Annexation
Putin's Troops Are Retreating Even As He Formalizes Russia's Annexation https://digitalalabamanews.com/putins-troops-are-retreating-even-as-he-formalizes-russias-annexation/ Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov vowed that Russian forces would retake annexed territory that had been lost in the Ukrainian advance and that land will be with Russia “forever” — as Putin promised last week. “They will be returned,” Peskov told reporters. Putin himself promised to “stabilize” the situation in the newly annexed territories. “We proceed from the fact that the situation will be stabilized, we will be able to calmly develop these territories,” the Russian leader said during a video conference with Russian teachers on Wednesday. Kyiv’s troops broke through earlier this week, threatening a deeper thrust that could see them inch closer to the administrative center of Kherson, which has been occupied since the early days of the war and is a strategically important port city with access to the Black Sea.  While Russia’s Defense Ministry has not officially commented, the Russian-installed deputy head of the regional administration appeared to acknowledge its troops had lost ground in the south. The Russian army in the Kherson region was “regrouping” to gather strength and strike back, Kirill Stremousov was quoted as saying by the state news agency Ria on Wednesday. He said there was “no movement” in Ukraine’s advance as of Wednesday, and Ukrainian forces entering into the city of Kherson was “impossible.” NBC News could not verify either side’s claims, but Western analysts said evidence suggested Ukraine’s military had gained the upper hand in the area. British military intelligence said Wednesday that Ukraine continued to make progress in offensive operations along both the northeastern and the southern fronts, while the Institute for the Study of War, a U.S.-based military think tank, said in its assessment Tuesday that Ukraine’s forces continued to make “substantial gains” in the north of the Kherson region, “beginning to collapse the sparsely-manned Russian lines in that area.”  Ukraine’s military has forced Russian troops to fall back to their second defensive line, but there has not yet been a collapse like the one seen during Ukraine’s lightning counteroffensive in the northeast last month, said Jack Watling, a military analyst at the Royal United Services Institute, a think tank in the United Kingdom. Ukrainian soldiers in the northeastern Kharkiv region on Tuesday.Yasuyoshi Chiba / AFP – Getty Images “But the significance of these advances is that it’s progress, and it’s continuing to create problems in very different geographic areas for the Russian command,” Watling said, adding that it was wearing down some of Moscow’s “more capable troops.” “I think they are going to try to hold the second defense line, make it as strong as possible and play for time.”  That play for time may be an effort to test the resolve of Ukraine’s Western allies and to allow Russia’s newly mobilized troops to join the fight and strengthen its struggling military. Zelenskyy spoke with President Joe Biden on Tuesday, who underscored that the United States will never recognize Russia’s annexation. It came as the Biden administration announced a new $625-million security assistance package for Ukraine that includes additional weapons and equipment.  Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Tuesday that more than 200,000 people had already been drafted into Russia’s armed forces after a call-up that prompted an exodus of men of military age from the country and has also left analysts doubting its ability to drastically change Russia’s fortunes on the battlefield.  If Russia could quickly deploy additional troops that were well-trained, well-equipped, properly supplied and effectively integrated into existing force structures, then that would have an impact, said Christopher Tuck, an expert in conflict and security at King’s College London.  “Ukrainian gains to the northeast of Kherson, for example, have been made against Russian forces that are weak and exhausted,” Tuck said. “Good quality reinforcements would clearly improve Russian defensive capabilities, but none of those conditions apply.”  The troops being mobilized will still take weeks to arrive in numbers, and seem likely to be poorly trained, badly equipped and supplied, and fed into a military organization that is already in many cases demoralized, according to Tuck. “Modern land warfare is lethal to poorly trained troops,” he added. “It is likely that any newly mobilized forces will evaporate like water under the stress of combat.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Putin's Troops Are Retreating Even As He Formalizes Russia's Annexation
Alabama Author Ramona Reeves Comes Home With Award-Winning Debut
Alabama Author Ramona Reeves Comes Home With Award-Winning Debut
Alabama Author Ramona Reeves Comes Home With Award-Winning Debut https://digitalalabamanews.com/alabama-author-ramona-reeves-comes-home-with-award-winning-debut/ From The Lede Published: Oct. 05, 2022, 9:09 a.m. Ramona Reeves’ first book, “It Falls Gently All Around,” is a collection of intertwined stories. (Claire Mulkey/U. of Pittsburgh Press)Claire Mulkey/U. of Pittsburgh Press Knowing that Mobile native Ramona Reeves won a noteworthy literary prize for her new book, and that the prize had a sizeable monetary component, one almost can’t help wonder what terrible thing would happen to any of her characters after a $15,000 windfall. The stray thought gets a big laugh from Reeves. “I don’t know,” she says. “If it happened in the last story, it could be that Babbie will give the money to the church she’s going to and they’ll do something fabulous with it. In my mind that story does have a happy ending. But in some of the other stories, I don’t know. I would be really scared for Donnie to get $15,000 in that second story.” That’s the one where Donnie hits bottom, losing his truck-driving job to alcoholism. A truck-stop job and a newfound interest in yoga provide a tenuous basis for a sober life, but he’s not a candidate to do anything positive with a sudden influx of ready money. It’s not that Donnie, or the rest of the people in “It Falls Gently All Around,” lead unrelentingly tragic lives. Far from it. But all of them are keenly aware of the cosmic adage that “Nothing Can Ever Be Easy.” It has defined their lives. No safe harbor stays safe forever; no two steps forward come without one back. They’ve learned it the hard way and keep on plugging. The book is a collection of interrelated short stories loosely centered on Donnie and Babbie, a woman craving redemption after three divorces and some other bad decisions. They and a larger cast of characters persevere through miscarriage, broken hearts, relapses, Alzheimer’s, unlikely romances, unexpected parenthood and other trials. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Alabama Author Ramona Reeves Comes Home With Award-Winning Debut
Nip Homeless Animal Population In The Bud With Low-Cost Spay Neuter Procedure
Nip Homeless Animal Population In The Bud With Low-Cost Spay Neuter Procedure
‘Nip’ Homeless Animal Population In The Bud With Low-Cost Spay, Neuter Procedure https://digitalalabamanews.com/nip-homeless-animal-population-in-the-bud-with-low-cost-spay-neuter-procedure/ Published on October 5, 2022 Animal shelters and rescue organizations across the U.S. have been operating in crisis mode for months due to a surge in the homeless pet population, and Huntsville Animal Services is no exception. The good news is that there is a simple path toward a solution – spaying and neutering pets. “We used to take in 7-10 [animals] on a typical day,” said Animal Services Director Dr. Karen Sheppard. “Lately, it’s common for us to take in 25 or more in a single day. A few weeks ago, we took in 34 in just one day.” While the need for adopters and foster homes is still there, another need exists that has a direct impact on the number of homeless animals in the city. “We really need people to get their pets spayed and neutered,” Sheppard said, adding that the cost of a spay/neuter procedure is much less than the cost of caring for a litter. If getting a pet fixed is cost-prohibitive, there are several ways to get a lower-cost, income-based spay/neuter procedure. Huntsville pet owners who are on state or federal subsidized assistance or have an adjusted gross annual income of $35,000 or less qualify for the Fixin’ Alabama Spay/Neuter Program. Qualifying pet owners can go to Huntsville Animal Services at 4950 Triana Blvd. SW, show proof of eligibility (e.g., Medicaid, Disability, EBT, WIC, tax documents) and get a voucher. They can then contact a participating veterinary office to schedule the spay/neuter surgery and remit the voucher. The pet owner will also receive a free lifetime license for the newly spayed/neutered pet. Additionally, Spay/Neuter Action Project (SNAP) assists with low-cost spay/neuter procedures for eligible pet owners in Madison County. Anyone interested in adopting a spayed or neutered animal should visit Huntsville Animal Services. Adoptable pets are also vaccinated, microchipped and come with a City license and free bag of pet food. Those unable to adopt are asked to consider fostering an animal through the shelter’s foster program. Click here to see photos, ages and descriptions of available animals. The shelter is located at 4950 Triana Blvd SW and is open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call 256-883-3783, visit HuntsvilleAL.gov/Animal or check them out on Facebook to learn more. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Nip Homeless Animal Population In The Bud With Low-Cost Spay Neuter Procedure
Act Of Defiance: US Advocates Launching Mobile Abortion Clinic
Act Of Defiance: US Advocates Launching Mobile Abortion Clinic
‘Act Of Defiance’: US Advocates Launching Mobile Abortion Clinic https://digitalalabamanews.com/act-of-defiance-us-advocates-launching-mobile-abortion-clinic/ Yamelsie Rodriguez describes it as an “act of defiance”. But more than that, the plan to open a mobile abortion clinic in the US state of Illinois aims to respond to what Rodriguez – president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of the St Louis region and southwest Missouri – said is an increasingly urgent need for abortion services. Illinois has seen a dramatic jump in the number of patients travelling from states where abortion was banned or severely restricted after the United States Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to the procedure in June, she told Al Jazeera. Abortion remains legal in Illinois and people have been travelling long distances from Oklahoma, Tennessee and other areas to access care since the fall of Roe v Wade, she said. Already, wait times at a Planned Parenthood clinic in southern Illinois, just across the Mississippi River from St Louis, have jumped from four days to more than two weeks. “We have made it clear to our patients that we were not going to leave them behind, and that we were not going to back down,” Rodriguez told Al Jazeera, stressing the group’s commitment to providing patients with abortion services “no matter where they are”. Earlier this week, the US marked 100 days since the country’s top court overturned its landmark 1973 abortion ruling, setting off widespread protests and calls for action to protect reproductive rights. The end of Roe v Wade also saw Republican-led states immediately spring into action to curtail the procedure, capping a decades-long campaign by conservatives and religious groups opposed to abortion. Several states imposed outright bans, while others put stringent curbs in place. Planned Parenthood’s mobile abortion clinic – the group’s first in the US – comes as part of an opposite push by rights advocates to create abortion sanctuary networks and reduce barriers to accessing the procedure in a post-Roe US. “It’s been 100 days since the Supreme Court unjustly overturned #RoevWade, but our communities are coming together in new ways to protect access to reproductive healthcare,” St Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones wrote on Twitter on Monday, welcoming the mobile clinic plan. Rodriguez told Al Jazeera that Planned Parenthood has secured an 11-metre (37-foot) RV, which will have two examination rooms, a waiting room and a laboratory. The vehicle is expected to be operational before the end of the year, when it will travel along Illinois’s southern border offering what’s known as medication abortion up to 11 weeks of gestation. The process – ending a pregnancy through medication – accounts for more than half of all abortions in the US, according to the Guttmacher Institute reproductive rights group. Surgical abortions will be available at the mobile clinic early next year, Rodriguez said. “We expect to see an increase in demand for mobile care as the goal here is to reduce the hundreds of miles that people are travelling one way just to access abortion care in southern Illinois,” she added. Travel increasing Even before Roe was overturned, approximately 9 percent of abortion patients in the US had to travel outside their home states to access services, the Guttmacher Institute said. But rights advocates have warned the rate is steadily increasing since the Supreme Court’s decision. The National Abortion Federation, which operates the country’s largest abortion hotline, said it paid for 76 hotel rooms in the first month after the top court overturned Roe on June 24 – up from five such bookings during the same period a year earlier. The federation also booked 52 bus or plane trips for patients travelling for abortion services between June 24 and July 25 of this year, compared to just one over the same period in 2021. “More people are being forced to travel now than ever before,” the group’s chief operating officer, Veronica Jones, said in a statement in August unveiling the statistics. “The truth is, abortion bans are intended to make accessing care burdensome, and even with financial assistance, some people will still be denied the abortion care they need. Until we restore abortion rights for everyone and remove the burdens that made accessing abortion care difficult even before Roe was overturned, there will always be people without access to the care they want and need.” That was echoed by Rodriguez at Planned Parenthood, who said reproductive rights groups are in an “all hands on deck” moment to provide access to care. “One hundred days post-[the Supreme Court decision], what we are seeing is exactly what we expected … devastating stories of people who are being forced to flee their home states, people who are outraged that a 50-year precedent has been taken away,” she told Al Jazeera. “But I think the silver lining of this,” she added, “is that more and more people are coming out and standing firmly for reproductive rights.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Act Of Defiance: US Advocates Launching Mobile Abortion Clinic
Central Maine Town To Send Relief Checks To Residents To Assist With Rising Property Taxes
Central Maine Town To Send Relief Checks To Residents To Assist With Rising Property Taxes
Central Maine Town To Send Relief Checks To Residents To Assist With Rising Property Taxes https://digitalalabamanews.com/central-maine-town-to-send-relief-checks-to-residents-to-assist-with-rising-property-taxes/ It’s no secret that everything is getting more expensive these days. Literally everything. From the fuel you put into your vehicle to the fuel you use to heat your home, it’s all becoming too much to handle for thousands of Mainers across the state. Additionally, trying to handle a mortgage payment, heating fuel, groceries and medications can prove to be too much for those Mainers that are on fixed incomes, particularly our growing senior citizen population. That’s why one Maine city is attempting to send relief to their most vulnerable citizens. According to WGME 13, the city of Auburn, Maine is preparing to launch a program that will put $300 relief checks in the hands of many across the city. The city recognizes that home values, not just in Auburn but everywhere, are on the rise. And, with that rise in values, will come an increase in property tax. Auburn’s Mayor, Jason Levesque, said that a combination of a housing shortage, mixed with the pandemic and low interest rates, are some of the factors that have led to the increase in values and taxes. Levesque said in part, “Our older residents, and those that are on a fixed income, have lived in their homes for so long, they’re the ones that saw the largest increase in appraised value.” WGME is reporting that Monday night, the Auburn City Council voted to allocate $700,000 of the city’s American Rescue Plan acts funds to send ‘tax relief checks’ to city homeowners that are 65 or older. The motion was passed 5-2 in the Council. Beginning in November, seniors that meet the aforementioned requirements, will need to obtain and fill out an application to receive the relief funds. Starting in November they will have a three month window to get their application filled out and submitted. 2022 Family Friendly Halloween Events We’ve put together a list of some of the best trunk or treats and other family friendly Halloween events in Maine. Some of these are free, for others, there is a nominal charge. If there is something we should add to our list, email cooper.fox@townsquaremedia.com New Maine Laws In 2022 On Monday, August 15th, 2022 nearly two dozen new laws went into effect. Here are some of the highlights Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Central Maine Town To Send Relief Checks To Residents To Assist With Rising Property Taxes
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business https://digitalalabamanews.com/musk-deal-could-see-trump-back-on-twitter-by-midterms-cnn-business/ 01:51 – Source: CNN Is the Musk Twitter deal back on?! Here are the winners and losers CNN  —  Elon Musk’s decision this week to once again move forward with his deal to acquire Twitter could see the return to the platform of former President Donald Trump, once the world’s most influential tweeter. While Trump has previously said he would stay on his own social media platform, Truth Social, rather than return to Twitter, the former president may find the lure of tens of millions of Twitter followers difficult to resist. “I do think it was not correct to ban Donald Trump; I think that was a mistake,” Musk said at a conference in May, pledging to reverse the ban were he to become the company’s owner. Despite agreeing to take over the company earlier this year, Musk soured on the idea over the summer and spent months battling to get out of it. Twitter sued him to force him to complete the deal. His U-turn and decision to go ahead with buying the company came to light in a securities filing Tuesday, just two weeks before he and Twitter are due to go to court. Twitter said Tuesday it was intent on closing the deal, opening the possibility that Musk could take over the company within weeks, if the deal is completed. The company’s board and shareholders had previously approved the deal, but uncertainties remain. Twitter will have to decide how to play ball with Musk, taking into account his prior waffling on the deal — a negotiation process that could come down to how to ensure the world’s richest man will actually cut a check this time. If the deal goes through, it could soon return to Trump what was once his preferred social media platform. Trump, whose tweets as president often drove the agenda in Washington, DC, had almost 90 million followers before he was banned permanently by the platform two days after the January 6 attack on the Capitol. (It’s unclear whether Trump would automatically regain his followers if unbanned.) Twitter said it made the decision “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.” Speaking in May, a few weeks after he began his bid to take over Twitter, Musk argued, “Banning Trump from Twitter didn’t end Trump’s voice, it will amplify it among the right and this is why it’s morally wrong and flat out stupid.” (Musk has also said he’s against permanent bans more broadly, which could open the door for far-right personalities and conspiracy theorists to return to the platform.) Jack Dorsey, who was the CEO of Twitter when the company banned Trump but has since left the company, responded to Musk’s comments saying he agreed that there should not be permanent bans. He said Trump’s ban was a “business decision” and it “shouldn’t have been.” Musk’s comments came just as Trump was about to begin posting on his own social media platform, Truth Social. Trump told Fox News at the time that he would not return to Twitter, even if he were allowed. “I am not going on Twitter, I am going to stay on Truth,” Trump told Fox News. He added, “I hope Elon buys Twitter because he’ll make improvements to it and he is a good man, but I am going to be staying on Truth.” But relations between the pair seem to have soured since, with the men publicly trading barbs over the summer. After Trump called Musk a “bullsh*t artist” at a rally in July, Musk responded by tweet, writing, “I don’t hate the man, but it’s time for Trump to hang up his hat & sail into the sunset.”  Trump has not commented on Musk’s decision to revive the deal this week. Trump’s potential return to Twitter comes just a few months before he could also be allowed to return to Meta’s Facebook and Instagram. Unlike Twitter, which said it had permanently banned Trump, Meta (formerly Facebook) said it would review its ban after two years – meaning the former president could be returning to its platforms as soon as January 2023, just as the next presidential race is set to begin. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Musk Deal Could See Trump Back On Twitter By Midterms | CNN Business
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time — Why Doesn https://digitalalabamanews.com/democrats-won-the-biggest-policy-battle-of-our-time-why-doesn/ I’m so old I can remember a time before critical race theory, Mr. Potato Head and library books about gay teenagers were the greatest threats to America. I know it’s hard to believe that anything could ever be more dangerous to all we hold dear, but once upon a time millions of people were convinced that affordable health care spelled the end of the republic as we know it. They took to the streets, mobbed town hall meetings and screamed bloody murder when the government proposed a law that would ban insurance companies from refusing to cover sick people and offered government help to people who could not afford the sky-high premiums those companies charged. It seems like ancient history now but just a few years ago the hottest, most contentious issue in America was the passage of the Affordable Care Act (also known, for better or worse, as Obamacare). The Republican Party organized itself for almost a decade solely around a promise to repeal it. In fact, they actually voted to do so 67 times over the course of seven years. As president at the time, Barack Obama would have vetoed any repeal, of course, but the act of voting against it was enough to keep the base in line, outraged and on the march from one election to the next. In the 2016 election, all the Republican candidates had ACA repeal as a top priority. By that time the program was becoming part of people’s lives and broadly gaining in popularity, so the GOP had landed on “repeal and replace” as their slogan — a promise to enact something different but equivalent, the details of which they always failed to spell out. Inevitably, the best they could offer was some kind of vague, voluntary state-by-state insurance plan that would be more expensive and grossly inadequate. Nonetheless, it seemed to animate their voters like no other issue. The American right just hated Obamacare, even more than the ancient shibboleths of “welfare” and “affirmative action.” Donald Trump, as usual, took the “replace” promise to new heights. Just days before the 2016 election, he made this vow: My first day in office, I am going to ask Congress to put a bill on my desk getting rid of this disastrous law and replacing it with reforms that expand choice, freedom, affordability. You’re going to have such great health care at a tiny fraction of the cost. And it’s going to be so easy. Well, it wasn’t so easy. The House passed a terrible replacement bill in 2017 but it failed in the Senate bill by one vote, after that legendary thumbs-down by Sen. John McCain, who was near the end of his life but wanted a final measure of revenge against Trump, perhaps over his spiteful comments about McCain’s record of military service. (I think he was the last Republican, before Liz Cheney, to land a truly damaging blow against Trump.) Trump tried to move on to tax cuts but must have gotten some blowback from the base. In October of that year he tried to have it both ways, tweeting, “As usual the ObamaCare premiums will be up (the Dems own it) but we will Repeal & Replace and have great Healthcare soon — after Tax Cuts!” Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. By that time, Republicans in Congress were counting on the Supreme Court to gut the Affordable Care Act for them, and kept a lower profile on the issue. Nonetheless, Republican candidates for office still ran on the promise and Trump kept saying the bill was almost ready, so the base was supposedly still excited at the prospect — dampened a bit, no doubt, by GOP losses in 2018. As the 2020 election cycle began, Trump started campaigning on repeal-and-replace again, claiming he would announce a new plan “in two months, maybe less.” That didn’t happen, and as usual he just started saying whatever he thought people wanted to hear: A plan would be “ready in two weeks” or “by the end of the month,” or he was just about to issue an executive order “requiring health insurance companies to cover all preexisting conditions for all customers,” something he claimed had “never been done before.” His crowds cheered deliriously, no doubt believing that just as he’d surely finish his wall he’d get that done in a second term as well. Trump kept promising a new health care plan “in two months” and then “two weeks,” and then vowed to issue an executive order to force insurance companies to cover everything at no cost. Somehow we never got to see this fabulous plan. Trump lost that election — in reality, if not in the collective imagination of his fans — so we never got to see that fabulous health care plan that would cost nothing and cover everything. Still, losing elections had never stopped the Republicans from running on the issue anyway. Repealing Obamacare was their holy grail for almost a decade, until they suddenly stopped talking about it. So what gives? Why haven’t we heard anything at all about it this election cycle? Well, as NBC News reports, the Republican commitment to ensuring that millions of people suffer from unnecessary illness, death and bankruptcy just isn’t sexy anymore: With slightly more than a month before the next election, Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail aren’t making an issue of Obamacare. None of the Republican Senate nominees running in eight key battleground states have called for unwinding the ACA on their campaign websites, according to an NBC News review. The candidates scarcely mention the 2010 law or health insurance policy in general. And in interviews on Capitol Hill, key GOP lawmakers said the desire for repeal has faded. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s recent “Commitment to America” made no mention of it either, although the chairman of the ultra-conservative Republican Study Committee did put out a plan that included an unspecified reversal of “the ACA’s Washington-centric approach.” When asked about it, however, he told NBC that it would be up to McCarthy, the presumptive incoming House speaker, to put it on the agenda. Interestingly, while it’s true that Obamacare is popular, it’s not all that popular. A Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll found that 55% of U.S. adults approved of the ACA while 42% disapproved. So it’s not liek the GOP base hasn’t come around. They’re just bored with being angry about it and have been distracted by all the more exciting new grievances of the moment. Kevin McCarthy and Rick Scott don’t talk about Obamacare in 2022 — maybe because the GOP base likes their racism undiluted these days. Repealing government-guaranteed health care has been a fundamental principles of the right wing for as long as I can remember. Medicare and Medicaid (aka “entitlements”) have perennially been on the chopping block. I assume Republicans still hate it for the same reason they’ve always hated it: The wrong people may benefit, and that makes it unacceptable. They’ve got no major problem with government social programs — as long as they’re targeted to “real” Americans, if you know what I mean.  Over the past few years, however, the principles that have always been just below the surface of conservative hostility toward egalitarian government programs have evolved from implicit racial animosity to more explicit demands for racist policies and a full-blown assault on the democratic process. The impulses really haven’t changed but the right is now willing to experiment with extremist tactics to achieve their goals. Still, I would never say they’ve entirely given up on repealing Obamacare. While Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, the Senate Republican campaign chairman, doesn’t specifically mention it in his audacious governing agenda, he still wants to “rein in” Medicare and Social Security (through unspecified cuts in benefits or services). Some things never change. I would imagine that Obamacare will soon be viewed as another “entitlement,” which must be cut for our own good. For the moment, however, let’s take a moment to recognize that Democrats managed to defeat Republicans in one of the biggest policy battles of this generation. The war, needless to say, continues on other fronts.  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
World Briefing
World Briefing
World Briefing https://digitalalabamanews.com/world-briefing-2/ Retreating Russians leave their comrades’ bodies behind LYMAN, Ukraine (AP) — Russian troops abandoned a key Ukrainian city so rapidly that they left the bodies of their comrades in the streets, offering more evidence Tuesday of Moscow’s latest military defeat as it struggles to hang on to four regions of Ukraine that it illegally annexed last week. Meanwhile, Russia’s upper house of parliament rubber-stamped the annexations following “referendums” that Ukraine and its Western allies have dismissed as fraudulent. Responding to the move, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy formally ruled out talks with Russia, declaring that negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin are impossible after his decision to take over the regions. The Kremlin replied by saying that it will wait for Ukraine to agree to sit down for talks, noting that it may not happen until a new Ukrainian president takes office. “We will wait for the incumbent president to change his position or wait for a future Ukrainian president who would revise his stand in the interests of the Ukrainian people,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Deal back on? Elon Musk gets closer to buying Twitter The tumultuous saga of Elon Musk’s on-again off-again purchase of Twitter took a turn toward a conclusion Tuesday after the mercurial Tesla CEO proposed to buy the company at the originally agreed-on price of $44 billion. Musk made the surprising turnaround not on Twitter, as has been his custom, but in a letter to Twitter that the company disclosed in a filing Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. It came less than two weeks before a trial between the two parties is scheduled to start in Delaware. In response, Twitter said it intends to close the transaction at $54.20 per share after receiving the letter from Musk. But the company stopped short of saying it’s dropping its lawsuit against the billionaire Tesla CEO. Experts said that makes sense given the contentious relationship and lack of trust between the two parties. “I don’t think Twitter will give up its trial date on just Musk’s word — it’s going to need more certainty about closing,” said Andrew Jennings, professor at Brooklyn Law School, noting that the company may also be worried about Musk’s proposal being a delay tactic. After all, he’s already tried to unsuccessfully postpone the trial twice. Trading in Twitter’s stock, which had been halted for much of the day pending release of the news, resumed trading late Tuesday and soared 22% to close at $52. Loretta Lynn, coal miner’s daughter, country queen, dies NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Loretta Lynn, the Kentucky coal miner’s daughter whose frank songs about life and love as a woman in Appalachia pulled her out of poverty and made her a pillar of country music, has died. She was 90. In a statement provided to The Associated Press, Lynn’s family said she died Tuesday at her home in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. “Our precious mom, Loretta Lynn, passed away peacefully this morning, October 4th, in her sleep at home in her beloved ranch in Hurricane Mills,” the family said in a statement. They asked for privacy as they grieve and said a memorial will be announced later. Lynn already had four children before launching her career in the early 1960s, and her songs reflected her pride in her rural Kentucky background. As a songwriter, she crafted a persona of a defiantly tough woman, a contrast to the stereotypical image of most female country singers. The Country Music Hall of Famer wrote fearlessly about sex and love, cheating husbands, divorce and birth control and sometimes got in trouble with radio programmers for material from which even rock performers once shied away. Trump asks Supreme Court to intervene in Mar-a-Lago dispute WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawyers for former President Donald Trump asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to step into the legal fight over the classified documents seized during an FBI search of his Florida estate, escalating a dispute over the powers of an independent arbiter appointed to inspect the records. The Trump team asked the justices to overturn a lower court ruling and allow the arbiter, called a special master, to review the roughly 100 documents with classification markings that were taken in the Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago. A three-judge panel from the Atlanta-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit last month limited the special master’s review to the much larger tranche of non-classified documents. The judges, including two Trump appointees, sided with the Justice Department, which had argued there was no legal basis for the special master to conduct his own review of the classified records. But Trump’s lawyers said in their application to the Supreme Court that it was essential for the special master to have access to the classified records to “determine whether documents bearing classification markings are in fact classified, and regardless of classification, whether those records are personal records or Presidential records.” “Since President Trump had absolute authority over classification decisions during his Presidency, the current status of any disputed document cannot possibly be determined solely by reference to the markings on that document,” the application states. Haiti at breaking point as economy tanks, violence soars PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Daily life in Haiti began to spin out of control last month just hours after Prime Minister Ariel Henry said fuel subsidies would be eliminated, causing prices to double. Gunshots rang out as protesters blocked roads with iron gates and mango trees. Then Haiti’s most powerful gang took a drastic step: It dug trenches to block access to the Caribbean country’s largest fuel terminal, vowing not to budge until Henry resigns and prices for fuel and basic goods go down. The poorest country in the Western hemisphere is in the grips of an inflationary vise that is squeezing its citizenry and exacerbating protests that have brought society to the breaking point. Violence is raging and making parents afraid to send their kids to school; fuel and clean water are scarce; hospitals, banks and grocery stores are struggling to stay open. The president of neighboring Dominican Republic described the situation as a “low-intensity civil war.” Life in Haiti is always extremely difficult, if not downright dysfunctional. But the magnitude of the current paralysis and despair is unprecedented. Political instability has simmered ever since last year’s still-unsolved assassination of Haiti’s president; inflation soaring around 30% has only aggravated the situation. Lawyers: Arizona GOP chair pleaded Fifth to Jan. 6 panel PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward refused to answer questions during a deposition of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, an attorney for the panel revealed Tuesday during a court hearing in Phoenix. Attorney Eric Columbus told a federal judge that Ward asserted her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when she complied with a subpoena from the House committee. The detail about Ward’s deposition came at a hearing where lawyers urged a federal judge to block the committee from getting her phone records while she appeals. U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa ruled on Sept. 23 that Ward’s arguments that her phone call records should be secret did not pass legal muster. Ward attorney Laurin Mills cast the phone records fight as one with major implications for democracy, on par if not bigger than the violent insurrection that unfolded at the Capitol. “This is the first time in American history that a select committee of the United State Congress controlled by one party has subpoenaed the records of the state chair of the rival party,” Mills said. Smacked asteroid’s debris trail more than 6,000 miles long CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The asteroid that got smacked by a NASA spacecraft is now being trailed by thousands of miles of debris from the impact. Astronomers captured the scene millions of miles away with a telescope in Chile. Their remarkable observation two days after last month’s planetary defense test was recently released a National Science Foundation lab in Arizona. The image shows an expanding, comet-like tail more than 6,000 miles (10,000 kilometers) long, consisting of dust and other material spewed from the impact crater. This plume is accelerating away from the harmless asteroid, in large part, because of pressure on it from solar radiation, said Matthew Knight of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, who made the observation along with Lowell Observatory’s Teddy Kareta using the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope. Scientists expect the tail to get even longer and disperse even more, becoming so tenuous at one point that it’s undetectable. Young deputy in Florida fatally shot by friendly fire POLK CITY, Fla. (AP) — A 21-year deputy appeared to have been fatally shot by friendly fire from deputies with whom he was serving a warrant in central Florida early Tuesday, authorities said. The Polk County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that Deputy Blane Lane was shot in the left arm and chest at a trailer in Polk City, Florida, while serving a warrant with three other deputies on a suspect wanted for failing to appear on a felony drug charge. Shots were fired after deputies discovered the suspect with what appeared to be a handgun pointed at them but actually was a BB gun. Two of the deputies fired their guns, and “the round that struck Lane came from one of their firearms,” the sheriff’s office statement said. The deputy, who Sheriff Grady Judd described as one of the youngest on the force, was taken to a hospital where he died, “despite valiant efforts,” the sheriff said. The suspect, Cheryl William, also was hit multiple times. She was ta...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
World Briefing
Ukraine Takes Back Dozens Of Towns In 'annexed' Regions; Putin Is 'out Of Moves' Ex-CIA Chief Says
Ukraine Takes Back Dozens Of Towns In 'annexed' Regions; Putin Is 'out Of Moves' Ex-CIA Chief Says
Ukraine Takes Back Dozens Of Towns In 'annexed' Regions; Putin Is 'out Of Moves,' Ex-CIA Chief Says https://digitalalabamanews.com/ukraine-takes-back-dozens-of-towns-in-annexed-regions-putin-is-out-of-moves-ex-cia-chief-says-2/ Russia’s defense ministry concedes it’s under pressure from Ukraine’s advances Wreckage of a car marked with a Russian military symbol “Z” at a Russian military base, which Ukrainian forces destroyed by HIMARS during a counteroffensive in Kharkiv Oblast, on Sept. 26, 2022 in Balakliia, Ukraine. Balakliia was under Russian occupation for half a year. On Sept. 10, Ukraine’s armed forces liberated the city. Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images News | Getty Images Russia’s Ministry of Defense said it continues to hold positions in the regions of Kherson in southern Ukraine despite advances from Ukrainian forces. The MOD acknowledged that its units have been able to maintain their positions toward the south of the country despite “repelling superior enemy forces’ attacks.”  In its latest update on Telegram, Russia’s MOD said its forces had conducted attacks on Ukrainian units in Kharkiv, Donetsk (in the east) and Zaporizhzhia and Kherson in the south, claiming to have killed several hundred Ukrainian troops and destroyed a variety of weaponry in its various attacks. Nonetheless, it acknowledged that in the Kherson region, where Ukraine has reported a number of significant advances in recent days, it was under pressure with Russian units maintaining their positions in the Andriivka-Kyrvyi-Rih direction (in the south) despite attacks from “superior” Ukrainian forces. It’s unclear whether the ministry was referring to the quality or size of the Ukrainian units it described. CNBC was unable to verify the details in the report. — Holly Ellyatt The liberation of Luhansk region has begun, top Ukrainian official says A Ukrainian armored personnel carrier transports troops toward a pontoon bridge crossing of the Oskil River on September 30, 2022 in Kupiansk, Ukraine. Ukraine has recaptured thousands of square miles of its northeast Kharkiv region from Russian forces in recent weeks. Scott Peterson | Getty Images News | Getty Images Ukraine’s forces are making gains in the Luhansk region in the east of the country, according to a prominent Ukrainian official. If verified, the advances will mark further progress for Ukraine as it fights to reclaim territory that Russia claims to have annexed. “Well, now it’s official. The de-occupation of Luhansk region has begun,” Luhansk Regional Military Administration Head Serhiy Haidai said on Telegram Wednesday in comments translated by news agency Ukrinform. “Several settlements have already been liberated from the Russian army, and there the Armed Forces of Ukraine are already raising the Ukrainian flag there,” Haidai said without specifying where. Haidai said that the de-occupation of the region would continue, saying: “I thank our Armed Forces for wonderful news. Let’s help them, don’t get tired, we believe in our victory. Luhansk region is Ukraine, it has been and will be so. Carry on.” Ukraine’s counteroffensives in southern and eastern parts of the country have made headlines with the country’s armed forces making rapid advances and reclaiming dozens of settlements around Kherson in the south and Donetsk and Kharkiv in the east and northeast. If Haidai’s comments are verified it will confirm that Ukraine is now pushing into Luhansk from Donetsk, both of which are regions where Russia was seen to have a strong foothold and where two pro-Russian, self-proclaimed “republics” have now been incorporated into the Russian Federation (as have Kherson and Zaporizhzhia). Ukraine and its allies completely reject the annexation of Ukrainian territory, saying they will never recognize the illegal seizure of Ukrainian territory. — Holly Ellyatt What we’ve learned today about Russia’s ‘annexation’ of parts of Ukraine: Cadets attend an event marking the declared annexation of the Russian-controlled territories of four Ukraine’s Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, after holding what Russian authorities called referendums in the occupied areas of Ukraine that were condemned by Kyiv and governments worldwide, in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, September 30, 2022. Sergey Pivovarov | Reuters We’re learning more about the plans Russia has for four regions it illegally annexed from Ukraine last week. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed laws today formally annexing four Ukrainian regions that are only partially controlled by the country’s occupying forces. The “annexations” come after sham referendums were held in the regions of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Luhansk and Donetsk. Russian news agencies have been reporting more detail about what the annexations mean for the regions themselves. Here’s a snapshot of what we’ve heard: The borders of the Luhansk and Donetsk “people’s republics” and those of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions will be defined by the borders of territories which “existed on the day of their establishment and accession to Russia,” news agency Tass reports. The new regions will be integrated during a transitional period due to last until 2026. The Ukrainian hryvnia will be allowed for cash and non-cash payments until 2023. Then, the Russian ruble will be the sole currency there. The armed forces of the new regions (present in the Donetsk and the Luhansk “people’s republics”) are to become part of Russia’s armed forces. Until the heads of the new regions are elected according to Russian law, they will be governed by acting heads, who will be appointed by Putin. Regional parliamentary elections will be held in Sept. 2023. Needless to say, the annexations are not recognized by Ukraine and its allies and Kyiv has said it will fight until it has reclaimed all its lost land. Whether Russia will be able to hold on to the “annexed” regions is very much in doubt with Ukraine’s forces making advances in the south, around Kherson, and in the east in Donetsk and the northeastern region of Kharkiv. — Holly Ellyatt Berlin official accuses U.S. of ‘astronomical’ natural gas prices 17 May 2021, Saxony-Anhalt, Griebo: Gas is burned off at a mobile flare system at the station of the long-distance pipeline operator Ontras Gastransport in Apollensdorf. Ontras has been renewing the Neugattersleben (Nienburg) – Trajuhn gas pipeline northeast of Wittenberg since August 2019. This pipeline is an important transport route for the energy supply of Saxony-Anhalt and neighbouring regions. Before work can begin on the relevant section of the pipeline, the pressure across the downstream network is lowered as far as possible. Instead of blowing out the residual gas into the atmosphere in a controlled manner, it is burned off via a flare. This produces ten times less CO2 equivalent than blowing it out. The flare is operated under constant, expert supervision. A total of around 35,000 cubic meters of gas will be burned. The total length of the pipeline is 74 kilometers and it has a diameter of 40 to 50 centimeters. Photo: Hendrik Schmidt/dpa-Zentralbild/ZB (Photo by Hendrik Schmidt/picture alliance via Getty Images) Picture Alliance | Picture Alliance | Getty Images Germany’s economy minister accused the U.S. and other “friendly” gas supplier states of astronomical prices for their supplies, suggesting they were profiting from the fallout of the war in Ukraine. “Some countries, including friendly ones, sometimes achieve astronomical prices [for their gas]. Of course, that brings with it problems that we have to talk about,” Economy Minister Robert Habeck told regional German paper NOZ in an interview published Wednesday which was translated by NBC News. He called for more solidarity from the U.S. when it comes to assisting its energy-pressed allies in Europe. The comments by Habeck come at an anxious time for the EU as it scrambles to increase its gas reserves ahead of the winter. CNBC has contacted the U.S. State Dept. for comment and is awaiting a response. Read the whole story here Ukrainian soldiers greeted with flowers and tears after liberating village Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense and deputy foreign minister have shared a video of Ukrainian soldiers being greeted by cheering residents of Bohuslavka in the Kharkiv region, after the village was liberated. The footage shows a small crowd of residents gathered with flags and having given flowers for the soldiers, singing the Ukrainian national anthem while wiping tears from their eyes. In the video, one of the soldiers tells residents that Ukrainian forces have pushed back the enemy, with Russian forces having “retreated to a certain distance.” “You are no longer threatened by their artillery fire today,” the soldier says, according to comments translated by NBC News’ Ukrainian fixer Artem Grudinin. “Representatives of the military-civilian administration will arrive here tomorrow and will provide assistance. I hope you have some leaders who can develop a list of questions for them from your community. There is a car with an antenna there, they will give you internet there,” he says, with the crowd replying with “thank you.” — Holly Ellyatt Russian leaders likely concerned as Ukraine’s forces approach Luhansk borders, UK says Russian leaders are highly likely to be concerned that leading Ukrainian units are now approaching the borders of Luhansk region which Russia claimed to have formally annexed last week, the British Ministry of Defense said Wednesday. In its latest intelligence update on Twitter, the ministry said Ukraine continues to make progress in offensive operations along both the northeastern and southern fronts. “In the north-east, in Kharkiv Oblast [or province], Ukraine has now consolidated a substantial area of territory east of the Oskil River,” it said, with its formations advancing up to 12 miles beyond the river “into Russia’s defensive zone towards the s...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Ukraine Takes Back Dozens Of Towns In 'annexed' Regions; Putin Is 'out Of Moves' Ex-CIA Chief Says
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN https://digitalalabamanews.com/a-barrier-of-fear-has-been-broken-in-iran-the-regime-may-be-at-a-point-of-no-return-cnn/ CNN  —  A woman dressed in black raises a framed portrait of her son, Siavash Mahmoudi, in the air as she paces the sidewalk in Iran’s capital, Tehran. “I am not scared of anyone. They told me to be silent. I will not be,” the woman seen in a viral social media video yells, her voice fraught with emotion. “I will carry my son’s picture everywhere. They killed him.” Mahmoudi’s mother is among many Iranians who claim the regime tried to silence them as they mourned loved ones slain in ongoing nationwide demonstrations. But Iran’s protesters, and their supporters, are defiant. For weeks, a nationwide protest movement has relentlessly gathered momentum and appears to have blunted the government’s decades-old intimidation tactics. Slogans against the clerical leadership echo throughout the city. Videos of schoolgirls waving their headscarves in the air as they sing protest songs in classrooms have gone viral, as have images of protesters fighting back against members of the formidable paramilitary group Basij. These are scenes previously believed to be unthinkable in Iran, where the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei rules with an iron fist. But experts say that these protests transcend Iran’s many social and ethnic divisions, breaking a decades-old barrier of fear and posing an unprecedented threat to the regime. Across Iran, protesters seem intent on exposing the weaknesses of a clerical establishment which is widely accused of corruption and has stamped out dissent with arbitrary detentions and even mass executions. Tehran has been convulsing with demonstrations since the death in mid-September of Mahsa (also known as Zhina) Amini, the 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman who died after being detained by the country’s morality police for how she was dressed. Protests crop up sporadically in various parts of the capital throughout each day. At night, a chant that has become a staple of the protests — “death to the dictator” — sounds from the rooftops of buildings. It’s a reference to Khamenei, who was once considered beyond reproach because of his elevated clerical status. Anti-regime demonstrations have also penetrated the Islamic Republic’s power bases, including the Shia holy cities of Mashhad and Qom. Ethnic minorities — notably Kurds in the country’s north and northwest, and Baloch people in the southeast — have also staged protests, enduring what appear to be some of the most brutal crackdowns, with scores reportedly killed. Secondary schools and universities around the country are flashpoints, and women and girls have been taking off their mandatory headscarves, known as hijabs. “These terrorists think that our generation is the previous generation. We are not. Let me assure you,” a protester from Tehran’s prestigious Sharif University of Technology told CNN, referring to Iranian police who had violently cracked down on demonstrators on campus, and detained scores of young people. Social media video showed cars filling the streets shortly after news spread Sunday of the crackdown on students, horns blaring in solidarity with protesters as the showdown unfolded at the university, known for educating Iran’s best and brightest students. “If the dust settles and we stop protesting, they are going to kill even more of us. They are going to detain even more people and they are going to turn us to North Korea,” the impassioned protester said. “This is not the end. I promise you that.” CNN has not been able to independently verify the number of the dead and injured, but state media says 40 people have died since the start of demonstrations in mid-September. Rights group Amnesty International says at least 52 have been killed. Over 1,000 people are believed to have been detained, including journalists and artists. Last week, Amnesty International said it had obtained a leaked document which appeared to instruct commanders of armed forces in all provinces to “mercilessly confront” protesters, deploying riot police as well as some members of the military’s elite Revolutionary guards, the Basij paramilitary force and plainclothes security agents. CNN has not seen the leaked documents obtained by Amnesty International and cannot verify the reporting. CNN has reached out to Amnesty International on how it received the leaked documents but hasn’t received a reply. CNN has also reached out to Iranian government officials for a comment on Amnesty International’s reporting but hasn’t received a reply. In addition, Amnesty International said it had seen evidence of sexual assault against female protesters – CNN has not been able to verify this. Social media video has also shown Iranian security forces dragging unveiled women through the streets by their hair. The threat posed by these protests, analysts say, is existential to the regime, and is one of the biggest challenges the Islamic Republic has faced in years. “These are primarily very, very young people, a younger generation who have apparently completely lost faith that this Islamic Republic can be reformed,” said Trita Parsi, executive vice-president at the Washington, DC-based Quincy Institute. “They’re breaking from their previous generation who was seeking to reform the system from within,” Parsi added. “This new generation seems to not have any faith in that at all.” The 83-year-old Khamenei, who commented on the protests for the first time on Monday, blamed – without evidence – the United States and Israel for fueling the protests. He also made clear that the regime would block the protesters’ desire for change. “I say clearly that these riots and the insecurity were engineered by the US and the occupying, false Zionist regime (Israel), as well as their paid agents, with the help of some traitorous Iranians abroad,” said Khamenei in his address. The current protests may eventually be quashed or simply lose momentum, but analysts say Iran can expect another cycle of nationwide demonstrations in months to come. The latest demonstrations follow similar, but less widespread, protests against the government in 2019, 2017 and 2009. “The protests transcend social sectarian boundaries, bringing together a much broader strata of Iranian society than we have seen in years,” said Ali Vaez, director of the International Crisis Group’s Iran Project. “But they suffer from the same shortcomings that the previous movements in Iran also suffered from. Primarily, the lack of leadership. “It’s very difficult to be able to maintain and sustain a movement that over the long run will bring the regime to its knees without coordination and leadership,” Vaez said. Still, the protesters appear bolder than ever, sensing a window of opportunity that could quickly close as Iran appears to near development of a nuclear weapon, which would both entrench the regime’s grip on power and deepen its isolation. This is the scenario that anti-regime Iranians are trying desperately to avoid, said Vaez. “The only thing worse than a regime that kills and represses its own people is a regime with a nuclear weapon and that kills and represses its own people,” he said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
A Barrier Of Fear Has Been Broken In Iran. The Regime May Be At A Point Of No Return | CNN
Junior League Fundraiser To Feature Christmas Movies At Bama Theatre
Junior League Fundraiser To Feature Christmas Movies At Bama Theatre
Junior League Fundraiser To Feature Christmas Movies At Bama Theatre https://digitalalabamanews.com/junior-league-fundraiser-to-feature-christmas-movies-at-bama-theatre/ TUSCALOOSA, AL — The Junior League of Tuscaloosa (JLT) on Tuesday announced that its newest fundraiser will bring holiday cheer to the Bama Theatre with a pair of classic Christmas movies. Click here to subscribe to our free daily newsletter and breaking news alerts. The movies — “Elf” and “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” — will both be shown on Dec. 17 in the newly-renovated theatre in downtown Tuscaloosa. The upgrades to the Bama Theatre include new carpeting and seating. Find out what’s happening in Tuscaloosawith free, real-time updates from Patch. The theatre will also be decorated in holiday style and concessions will be offered during both movies. JLT also said a specialty cocktail served will be served for the 7 p.m. date night movie. All ticket sales will benefit the Junior League of Tuscaloosa’s community partners including Holt Elementary School and Tuscaloosa Angels. Funds raised will also allow the JLT to provide a free field trip for all Holt Elementary School students to see Polar Express at the Bama Theatre ahead of Christmas break. Find out what’s happening in Tuscaloosawith free, real-time updates from Patch. “The League has been exploring new ideas for raising necessary funds for women and children in Tuscaloosa while also adding value to our community with a new event,” JLT Executive Vice President Elizabeth Hinson. “I have loved taking my own children to Birmingham to watch holiday movies over the years, and am so excited the League is bringing that experience to Tuscaloosa this year. For anyone who has been looking forward to seeing the newly renovated Bama Theatre, this is the perfect opportunity. We hope to make this an annual event that will expand and add to the Christmas fun of downtown Tuscaloosa already created by the Tinsel Trail and Holidays on the Rivers.” Doors for the movies will open one hour before showtime and seating is general admission Here’s the lineup at the theater, 600 Greensboro Ave: ● Saturday, Dec. 17, at 2 p.m., “Elf.” ● Saturday, Dec. 17, at 7 p.m., “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation.” Ticket sales open on Oct. 10. Matinee tickets for “Elf” are $12 each and evening tickets for “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” are $15 each. Have a news tip or suggestion on how I can improve Tuscaloosa Patch? Maybe you’re interested in having your business become one of the latest sponsors for Tuscaloosa Patch? Email all inquiries to me at ryan.phillips@patch.com Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts. The rules of replying: Be respectful. This is a space for friendly local discussions. No racist, discriminatory, vulgar or threatening language will be tolerated. Be transparent. Use your real name, and back up your claims. Keep it local and relevant. Make sure your replies stay on topic. Review the Patch Community Guidelines. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Junior League Fundraiser To Feature Christmas Movies At Bama Theatre